Very nice, Lorenzo. I remember last year's. Seems like you may have gained some extra friends. BigDob looks like it gives at least one guy a good amount of exercise. And you all seem to drive the same car...
Re: Video Submissions
Posted: Tue Feb 04, 2014 8:17 am
by kwon o chul
The Brightness of the Venus.
See the reflections on the sea.
North
Copyright: Henri Luoma / HLP.fi
Everything here is shot in Finland between August 2013 and January 2014. I hope you enjoy!
Click to play embedded YouTube video.
Re: Video Submissions
Posted: Sat Feb 08, 2014 11:30 am
by michael_kunze
Sunsets - Time lapse video
Hi,
from some of my films, I have specially filtered sunsets. You can see the green and the blue flash. Recorded were the pictures on La Palma, Canary Islands.
Have fun.
Michael
Re: Video Submissions
Posted: Sat Feb 08, 2014 11:35 am
by michael_kunze
Hi,
actually it should be a ISON observations on La Palma. The weather was bad and only a starry night.
filtros pl, nd 1000x, nd 64x + pl y pl, y siempre de nubes en las manchas solares
Re: Video Submissions
Posted: Sun Feb 23, 2014 4:17 am
by alexhp
Over 100,000 asteroids and their colors, as seen by a single remarkable survey telescope.
This animation shows the orbital motions of over 100,000 of the asteroids observed by the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS), with colors illustrating the compositional diversity measured by the SDSS five-color camera. The relative sizes of each asteroid are also illustrated.
All main-belt asteroids and Trojan asteroids with orbits known to high precision are shown. The animation is rendered with a timestep of 3 days.
The compositional gradient of the asteroid belt is clearly visible, with green Vesta-family members in the inner belt fading through the blue C-class asteroids in the outer belt, and the deep red Trojan swarms beyond that.
Occasional diagonal slashes that appear in the animation are the SDSS survey beams; these appear because the animation is rendered at near the survey epoch.
The average orbital distances of Mercury, Venus, Earth, Mars, and Jupiter are illustrated with rings.
Very cool, Alex. Now all we need is a stereoscopic version!
Re: Video Submissions
Posted: Sun Feb 23, 2014 11:09 pm
by Rothkko
"y se quedan
dormidas para siempre
las horas caen en el pozo
y se quedan
dormidas
y se quedan dormidas para siempre
cada reloj que toca su campana
ya sabes lo que es
y no se hace ilusiones
ay, no se hace ilusiones"
enrique morente
Re: Video Submissions
Posted: Sun Feb 23, 2014 11:37 pm
by moladso
Giant arc flare near AR 11987 - 23/feb/2014 13:12h TU
Today I was alerted of one big arc evolving very fast and bright. With almost no time to prepare all the equipment I was able to take this terrific picture.
PST, DMK618 and EQ mount. Procesing software: Registax 6, PixInsigh Core and Gimp.
After analyzing the source video captured, I noticed the very fast movement of the flare going back to the Sun surface at an incredible high speed.
Video is a 2000 frames @ 60fps, around 2:15' of live video. Captured video was accelerated 10x (600fps) and repeated three times to better observe the movement of the arc flare (right side of the arc) falling into Sun surface (better seen at full screen).
Please, visit my web page at www.astronomica.es for fully detailed image information.
Re: Video Submissions
Posted: Wed Feb 26, 2014 10:08 am
by Bi2L
Hello, Finally I have render this video with lot of my pictures, hope you like it
here on Youtube 4K
Click to play embedded YouTube video.
and here on Video HD
Corfu Nightscapes - A Company of Stars, 4Κ-Timelapse, Music: John Miliadis
A company of stars, ~60,000 images of magical nightscapes of Corfu by Vasilis Metallinos paired with John Miliade's musical creations on a journey from the old Fortress and the beauty of Corfu to the Full Moon and to the Stars!
If in some shots you can see the Moon or the Sun bigger, while in some other shots smaller it has to do with the magnification of the telescope or lens. In shots where the moon looks huge, the distance from the ground target is very large ~ 8+ km , while the photographs is through the telescope with a focal length of 1000 mm. When you see the moon rising behind the Old Fort, while the mountains in the distance of up to up change is because the moon moves along the ecliptic ± 5 °.
In shots with stellar tracks , you can notice the movement that make stars, which essentially is the Earth that revolves around itself with speed 1674.4 km . / Hr. In fact , the rotation period of the Earth around its axis is 23 hours , 56 minutes and 4.09 seconds and called stellar day . Thus observing the Earth from celestial bodies , the main apparent motion is from east to west with a speed of 15 ° / h = 15 ' / min or for example a solar or lunar diameter every two minutes .
Observation Team of Astronomic Society of Corfu -- Ομάδα Παρατήρησης Αστρονομικής Εταιρείας Κέρκυρας
Ιόνιο Πανεπιστήμιο τμήμα Μουσικών σπουδών - Ionian University Music Department
Video Produser Bill Metallinos - Powered by Elpis Metallinou
Photographer Bill Metallinos
Music Composed John Miliadis
Music Orchestration John Miliadis
Music Production John Miliadis
Equipment
ChronoCon dolly slider
Canon eos 40D, Canon eos 400D, Canon eos 30D, Canon eos 700D, Canon eos 5Dmk2,
Ef 100-400 is usm, Ef 100L Macro 100mm, Ef 15mm Fisheye 2.8, Efs 17-55 is usm f2.8, Samyung 8mm Fisheye
SW ED80 600mm f7.5, Takahashi Toa130 1000mm f7.7
Sony Vegas Pro 12
Logic Pro
Saturn Moon Daytime Occultation Feb 22 2014 Copyrights: Colin Legg
Re: Video Submissions
Posted: Sat Mar 01, 2014 1:15 pm
by kwon o chul
Aurora, winter season from aurora village,
Yellowknife, Canada.
2009~2014.
Compare time-lapse and real-time aurora taken at the same time.
time-lapse (03:01~) vs real-time (01:52~)
I think real-time is less bright and less color than naked eye.
But time-lapse is more bright and more color than naked eye.
So real feeling is between the real-time and time-lapse.
time-lapse
real-time
Re: Video Submissions
Posted: Sat Mar 01, 2014 7:51 pm
by Bonobo
Click to play embedded YouTube video.
Selecciona 1080 HD (rueda dentada abajo a la derecha)
Select HD 1080 (gear down right)
El abrazo del Sol y el castillo
The embrace of the sun and the castle
El Sol se pone sobre el castillo de Almodóvar del Río, Córdoba, Andalucía, España
The sun sets over the castle of Almodóvar del Río, Córdoba, Andalusia, Spain
26 de Febrero 2014