Here's my humble offering. This was at maximum eclipse for Modesto, CA at 10:15 AM Pacific time. I have no eclipse glasses so I used some Pop Tart foil. Pop Tart Eclipse by Judy Schmidt, on Flickr
The Great American Eclipse 2017 Aug 21 Hopkinsville KY
For solar minimum, and after months of quiet activity, the sun really came to the eclipse party too. A large and beautiful sunspot group had appeared a few days earlier and rotated into the middle of the Sun on eclipse day. An hour and a half after totality, when my image capture sequence of the partial phases completed, I was able to have a first look at the images I captured. My jaw dropped when I saw this on the back of the camera. I was thrilled to have nailed most of the factors under my control, but I had not dreamed that the Sun would provide this level of activity at this point in the solar cycle.
The Partial Solar Eclipse at maximun ( 80% ) of August 21st, 19:34ut. Under optimum conditions. Equipment: Lunt LS50Ha, ASI290mm, CGE Mount.
Re: 2017 August 21 eclipse images
Posted: Wed Aug 23, 2017 1:31 am
by amarando
2017 Total Solar Eclipse
The Sun's corona is visible during the totality phase of the 2017 total solar eclipse along with the star Regulus, which can be seen in the top left. This image was taken with a 300mm lens from Central, South Carolina at a location directly within the center of the path of totality. Credit: Ashley Marando Additional Information and Full Resolution
2017 Total Solar Eclipse
Red solar prominences can be seen along the Moon's edge in this image taken during the middle of the totality phase of the 2017 total solar eclipse. The image was taken with a 300mm lens in Central, South Carolina from a location directly within the center of the path of totality. Credit: Ashley Marando Additional Information and Full Resolution
2017 Total Solar Eclipse
Nearing the end of totality the first rays of the reemerging Sun can be seen during the 2017 total solar eclipse. This image was taken with a 300mm lens from Central, South Carolina at a location in the center of the path of totality. Credit: Ashley Marando Additional Information and Full Resolution
2017 Total Solar Eclipse
Just after the totality phased had passed, the second partial phase of the 2017 total solar eclipse can be seen. The image was taken from Central, South Carolina with a 300mm lens. Credit: Ashley Marando Additional Information and Full Resolution
2017 Total Solar Eclipse Composite
Here is a composite image of the different phases from the 2017 total solar eclipse. The image was taken from Central, South Carolina with a 300mm lens from a location in the center of the path of totality. The totality duration was 2 minutes and 37.6 seconds. Credit: Ashley Marando Additional Information and Full Resolution
Photo #5 looks artificial and #6 and #10 look like compositions of two photos at different focal lengths, because the eclipsed sun was not near the horizon at the places of capture. I think this post should be placed in 'Found images' section.
Tetons Eclipse from Table Mountain
Posted: Wed Aug 23, 2017 5:18 pm
by philhart
Last Friday I hiked up Table Mountain on the west side of the Teton Range to plant a camera with a timer in the hope of capturing the eclipse above the iconic Grand Teton and its companions. The hike is 6 miles each way and 4000+ feet elevation gain, with the summit over 11,000 ft - hard work for me at least!
While returning up the Table Mountain trail again yesterday (the day after eclipse), it was great to meet people who'd been camped out on the mountain and enjoyed the eclipse from the summit with 200 others! For a few hours on that return trip, I thought my work had been in vain as some day hikers I met later had discovered my camera and found it fallen over. My heart sank, but when I got to the summit I discovered the camera had only fallen over in the last 24 hours of its stay on the mountain, and not during the three days prior to the eclipse! This image is the result and just one in a sequence of 2000 captured in the few minutes around totality.