APOD: Moon and Venus over Switzerland (2011 Feb 02)
- NoelC
- Creepy Spock
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Re: APOD: Moon and Venus over Switzerland (2011 Feb 02)
Beautiful!
Gotta love it when the clouds try to black out the light pollution, making the night sky all the more dark. I'll bet the night sky view was spectacular the prior night!
-Noel
Gotta love it when the clouds try to black out the light pollution, making the night sky all the more dark. I'll bet the night sky view was spectacular the prior night!
-Noel
Re: APOD: Moon and Venus over Switzerland (2011 Feb 02)
I knew it! A yeti caught in the headlights perhaps?owlice wrote:Eyes!lnwolf wrote:But what are the two red lights in the mountains just below and left of the moon?
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Re: APOD: Moon and Venus over Switzerland (2011 Feb 02)
I promise to never, ever again complain about APOD posting pictures that are mostly landscape with perhaps one or two stellar or solar objects.
This is a well crafted and artistically beautiful image; it's beautiful and aesthetically pleasing. The image conveys more than just a visual record, it seduces the viewer to step into the view. Well done!
This is a well crafted and artistically beautiful image; it's beautiful and aesthetically pleasing. The image conveys more than just a visual record, it seduces the viewer to step into the view. Well done!
- Céline Richard
- Science Officer
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Re: APOD: Moon and Venus over Switzerland (2011 Feb 02)
I love this picture, it is wonderful !!!
Such a great, great image, which makes me dreaming
David Kaplan is a gifted artist!
Céline
Such a great, great image, which makes me dreaming
David Kaplan is a gifted artist!
Céline
"The cure for all the sickness and mistakes, for all the concerns and the sorrow and the crimes of the humanity, lies in the word "Love". It is the divine vitality which from everywhere makes and restores the life". Lydia Maria Child
Re: APOD: Moon and Venus over Switzerland (2011 Feb 02)
Yeah, the sky in the night went by was absolutely stunning. Have a look at the image I took before the moon rose above the horizon. Unfortunately the image isn't that nice, but you can imagine how crazy the sky looked like. We get stucked in the snow with our car at 1200m. Initially we wanted to drive all the way up at mount Gonzen (1800m). So we didn't had a really good spot for our night shots. We walked to another spot and there I had a few seconds to take the APOD shot. Some moments later the glow beneath the clouds disappeared.NoelC wrote:Gotta love it when the clouds try to black out the light pollution, making the night sky all the more dark. I'll bet the night sky view was spectacular the prior night!l
Actually the image initially was posted in full resolution by the APOD team which wasn't good for me because I am selling these pictures to my customers. Having a full res image of such a special shot for free turning it's rounds in the internet is not good for my business. We made a compromise. The image is now available at wallpaper size for free (something I usually won't do). Just klick at the image in APOD and you will get to the high res image.thugnificent wrote:Any chance you can link us to a higher resolution version of this photo?
As most of my images, this one resulted from a planned trip. Even more because another photographer went with me. Usually I work alone. As you may have read above, our plan didn't work out so we had to reorganize. Fortunately I did know the environment so we had the chance to find two different spots very quickly. I knew that the moon would arise shortly before the sun. I did not know that venus would arise together with the moon.moonstruck wrote:Great job David....Did you plan all that or just wake up one morning and there it was
I thank you all for your kind feedback. I feel very honored to be APOD photographer. Even more because I do not have a strong astronomical background.
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Re: APOD: Moon and Venus over Switzerland (2011 Feb 02)
I must say David, this is an absolutely magnificent capture. Congratulations.
Re: APOD: Moon and Venus over Switzerland (2011 Feb 02)
David Kaplan wrote:
Ann
The sky looked absolutely incredible in that picture you gave us a link to!Yeah, the sky in the night went by was absolutely stunning. Have a look at the image I took before the moon rose above the horizon. Unfortunately the image isn't that nice, but you can imagine how crazy the sky looked like.
Ann
Color Commentator
Re: APOD: Moon and Venus over Switzerland (2011 Feb 02)
Thanks so much for the higher resolution picture
Hello new wallpaper
Hello new wallpaper
Re: APOD: Moon and Venus over Switzerland (2011 Feb 02)
An anaglyph make with Google Earth showing approximately where the photo was taken.
Re: APOD: Moon and Venus over Switzerland (2011 Feb 02)
Just stunning...I would really like a big print of this....is this possible or no??
Re: APOD: Moon and Venus over Switzerland (2011 Feb 02)
Sure this is possible. Have a look at my Whitewall gallery: http://www.whitewall.com/kaplanmidnite wings wrote:Just stunning...I would really like a big print of this....is this possible or no??
Re: APOD: Moon and Venus over Switzerland (2011 Feb 02)
Great picture!
I've had this on the desktop at work for some time now, and there are several things of interest to me that I wanted like to point out, perhaps have some others correct my miscalculations if needed.
Note that all of this is based on the coordinates <<47°04'56.30" N 9°26'53.21" E>> given in the text.
While at first I assumed the bright spot on the horizon 3/4 of the way to the right was immediately "above" the yet-to-rise Sun, following a line orthogonal to the Moon's terminator slightly overshoots this bright spot (if the sun is below it, the line should undershoot it). Using Google Earth and Yoursky, I found the sun's azimuth is actually to the left of the tallest peak in the photo, and will later rise up to the right, finally appearing just to the left of center-photo. This means, however, that the aforementioned bright spot is actually a sun-dog, 22° from the sun.
Are sun-dogs allowed to appear before the sun has actually risen? Or has the sun indeed risen, and is hidden by the mountain? In that case, this photo also gets the distinction of being a daytime photo of Venus!
The " eyes " mentioned above are indeed from this massive antenna: Finally, and tenuously, if one zooms into the full resolution image, there's a very faint, small splotch in the sky above the "eyes". Is it possible this is one of the brighter stars of Sagittarius? Thanks for the photo, and for APOD, and for Starship Asterisk!
Sam
I've had this on the desktop at work for some time now, and there are several things of interest to me that I wanted like to point out, perhaps have some others correct my miscalculations if needed.
Note that all of this is based on the coordinates <<47°04'56.30" N 9°26'53.21" E>> given in the text.
While at first I assumed the bright spot on the horizon 3/4 of the way to the right was immediately "above" the yet-to-rise Sun, following a line orthogonal to the Moon's terminator slightly overshoots this bright spot (if the sun is below it, the line should undershoot it). Using Google Earth and Yoursky, I found the sun's azimuth is actually to the left of the tallest peak in the photo, and will later rise up to the right, finally appearing just to the left of center-photo. This means, however, that the aforementioned bright spot is actually a sun-dog, 22° from the sun.
Are sun-dogs allowed to appear before the sun has actually risen? Or has the sun indeed risen, and is hidden by the mountain? In that case, this photo also gets the distinction of being a daytime photo of Venus!
The " eyes " mentioned above are indeed from this massive antenna: Finally, and tenuously, if one zooms into the full resolution image, there's a very faint, small splotch in the sky above the "eyes". Is it possible this is one of the brighter stars of Sagittarius? Thanks for the photo, and for APOD, and for Starship Asterisk!
Sam
"No avian society ever develops space travel because it's impossible to focus on calculus when you could be outside flying." -Randall Munroe