Franklin is still very much active in the club!Guest wrote:Hey, great! I joined the RASC (Royal Astronomical Society of Canada) in Edmonton in about 1954 or 1955 - with Earl Milton, Franklin Loehde, Ian McLennan, Art Dalton,... It was WONDERFUL, great people! Dick Henry, Professor, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore
APOD: Noctilucent Clouds Over Edmonton (2011 Jul 20)
Re: APOD: Noctilucent Clouds Over Edmonton (2011 Jul 20)
Re: APOD: Noctilucent Clouds Over Edmonton (2011 Jul 20)
Thank you!orin stepanek wrote:I rather like the picture!
Re: APOD: Noctilucent Clouds Over Edmonton (2011 Jul 20)
Sadly - no sunset. The bulk of 'orange' visible at the horizon in the image is the light pollution of the city of Edmonton. The image was taken facing nearly due north. (That's Capella to the right...) The Sun sets at WNW during the summer in Edmonton.Beyond wrote:The almost square sunset is really nice. The shape reminds me of the really big fuel storage tanks with the floating tops. Except, they're not orange.
Re: APOD: Noctilucent Clouds Over Edmonton (2011 Jul 20)
According to the description, it's supposed to be the sun setting. It looks like somebody didn't check with the picture-taker. But it still looks really neat!gscratch wrote:Sadly - no sunset. The bulk of 'orange' visible at the horizon in the image is the light pollution of the city of Edmonton. The image was taken facing nearly due north. (That's Capella to the right...) The Sun sets at WNW during the summer in Edmonton.Beyond wrote:The almost square sunset is really nice. The shape reminds me of the really big fuel storage tanks with the floating tops. Except, they're not orange.
I wonder how come the "light-pollution" came out in that shape, and in that color?
To find the Truth, you must go Beyond.
Re: APOD: Noctilucent Clouds Over Edmonton (2011 Jul 20)
DavidLeodis wrote:I am confused as to the date when the image was taken. The "above" link in the explanation brings up a video from which the APOD seems to have been captured. The video is titled 'Noctilucent Cloud over Edmonton, Canada July 1, 2011' and other information with it states it was on Canada Day, which I have found is held on July 1st each year. However, just after the start of the video it gives the date 07 02 2011 (presumably July 2 2011) and at about 5 seconds into the video it states "1 hour (12:11am to 1:15am)". I'm unsure therefore if the event was in the very early hours of July 1st (which was Canada Day) or the very early hours of July 2nd (which was not Canada Day). It is a nice video and APOD picture but spoiled somewhat (at least to me) by the confusing dates.
To answer your question -
The images were shot starting at 11:43pm on July 1st, and ended at 2:15am *ish* July 2nd. The still in question was 'taken' on the second, 2 hours after I left Canada Day celebrations. Therefore - it was a 'Canada Day' photo that happened to be taken after midnight. Never thought that confusion would have been a big problem. I'll try to be more specific in future.
Re: APOD: Noctilucent Clouds Over Edmonton (2011 Jul 20)
Shape can be attributed to:According to the description, it's supposed to be the sun setting. It looks like somebody didn't check with the picture-taker. But it still looks really neat!
I wonder how come the "light-pollution" came out in that shape, and in that color?
a) shooting the central core of the city of Edmonton, particularly the 'densest' part of the city with orange sodium vapour lighting.
b) shooting with a Canon EF-S 18-55 which has some corner darkening that is more noticeable in low light, low contrast scenes.
[EDIT - ADDED C]
c) The foreground is an un-lit segment of the park - taken on a hill. The park runs E-W along the whitemud, so nothing in the foreground for illumination, and nothing in the sky above about 55 degrees - means a strip of light across the middle...
Color can be attributed to:
a) summer skyglow from the north (remember, just 1000km north of this it was daylight. )
b) summer dust and smoke in the atmosphere - which is almost always rust / brown coloured (spitballin on this one)
Re: APOD: Noctilucent Clouds Over Edmonton (2011 Jul 20)
Wow. This planet has some of the strangest places
To find the Truth, you must go Beyond.
- DavidLeodis
- Perceptatron
- Posts: 1169
- Joined: Mon May 01, 2006 1:00 pm
Re: APOD: Noctilucent Clouds Over Edmonton (2011 Jul 20)
Thank you Greg for answering, which is appreciated.gscratch wrote:DavidLeodis wrote:I am confused as to the date when the image was taken. The "above" link in the explanation brings up a video from which the APOD seems to have been captured. The video is titled 'Noctilucent Cloud over Edmonton, Canada July 1, 2011' and other information with it states it was on Canada Day, which I have found is held on July 1st each year. However, just after the start of the video it gives the date 07 02 2011 (presumably July 2 2011) and at about 5 seconds into the video it states "1 hour (12:11am to 1:15am)". I'm unsure therefore if the event was in the very early hours of July 1st (which was Canada Day) or the very early hours of July 2nd (which was not Canada Day). It is a nice video and APOD picture but spoiled somewhat (at least to me) by the confusing dates.
To answer your question -
The images were shot starting at 11:43pm on July 1st, and ended at 2:15am *ish* July 2nd. The still in question was 'taken' on the second, 2 hours after I left Canada Day celebrations. Therefore - it was a 'Canada Day' photo that happened to be taken after midnight. Never thought that confusion would have been a big problem. I'll try to be more specific in future.
I hope I'm wrong but I seem to detect a touch of irritation and incredulity in your reply that anyone would have been confused over the date. I apologise if I have in any way upset you about that. I did of course also say that it was "a nice video and APOD picture", which they are.
Re: APOD: Noctilucent Clouds Over Edmonton (2011 Jul 20)
Not at all David! Sorry if I gave that impression, in fact, the irritation was my own. I'm VERY new to imaging the sky on purpose and I have to learn that even when we are talking about images that are aesthetically pleasing - we're often still photographing something with a scientific purpose and value, and that any ambiguity can minimize the value of an observation. I should have been much more specific in my notes when I submitted the image, and ensuing video.I hope I'm wrong but I seem to detect a touch of irritation and incredulity in your reply that anyone would have been confused over the date. I apologise if I have in any way upset you about that. I did of course also say that it was "a nice video and APOD picture", which they are.
As I said - I never thought it would be confusing - and I should have. I'll do better with documenting that in future because it DOES make a difference!
Cheers!
- DavidLeodis
- Perceptatron
- Posts: 1169
- Joined: Mon May 01, 2006 1:00 pm
Re: APOD: Noctilucent Clouds Over Edmonton (2011 Jul 20)
Thanks Greg.gscratch wrote:Not at all David! Sorry if I gave that impression, in fact, the irritation was my own. I'm VERY new to imaging the sky on purpose and I have to learn that even when we are talking about images that are aesthetically pleasing - we're often still photographing something with a scientific purpose and value, and that any ambiguity can minimize the value of an observation. I should have been much more specific in my notes when I submitted the image, and ensuing video.I hope I'm wrong but I seem to detect a touch of irritation and incredulity in your reply that anyone would have been confused over the date. I apologise if I have in any way upset you about that. I did of course also say that it was "a nice video and APOD picture", which they are.
As I said - I never thought it would be confusing - and I should have. I'll do better with documenting that in future because it DOES make a difference!
Cheers!
I've never knowingly seen Noctilucent Clouds but from what I've read they are being seen further south than they used to be so I may one day be lucky enough to see them, though in my heavily light polluted area I'm lucky if I can see more than the brightest stars even in a clear night sky. Something though that I am seeing more than I used to (in daylight) are interesting cloud formations, such as herringbone clouds. In the morning of August 18 2011 the sky was full of very many hundreds (possibly thousands) of small light grey clouds with narrow bright bits between, with the result that the scene resembled a massive quilt cover. It was a gorgeous sight for the 20 minutes I saw them from 7:20 before they dispersed.