Nature & Man: Iridium Flare, Milky Way, Clouds and Light Pollution

Originally shared by Mike Taylor
Nature & Man: Iridium Flare, Milky Way, Clouds and Light Pollution
What is an Iridium flare?
Iridium flares are often mistaken for meteors because of their notable bright flashes of light in the night sky but they are actually caused by a specific group of satellites that orbit our planet. An Iridium flare is a specific type of satellite flare that is made when the antennas of an Iridium communication satellite reflect sunlight directly onto the surface of the Earth. The satellites are in a near-polar orbit at an altitude of 485 miles and their orbital period is approximately 100 minutes with a velocity of 16,800 miles per hour. The uniqueness of Iridium flares is that the spacecraft emits 'flashes' of very bright reflected light that sweep in narrow focused paths across the surface of the Earth. An Iridium communication satellite's Main Mission Antenna is a silver-coated Teflon antenna array that mimics near-perfect mirrors - the array is angled at 40 degrees away from the axis of the body of the satellite. This can provide a specular reflection of the Sun's disk, periodically causing a dazzling glint of reflected sunlight. At the Earth's surface, the specular reflection is probably less than 50 miles wide, so each flare can only be viewed from a fairly small area. The flare duration can last from anywhere between 5 to 20 seconds and can easily be seen by the naked eye.
Sources:
http://www.ph.surrey.ac.uk/satellites/main/project2_4.html
http://www.space.com/6898-reflections-space-spot-iridium-flares.html
http://www.wikihow.com/Find-an-Iridium-Flare
This image is one frame from a time lapse of the Milky Way & other features of the night sky in motion against a silhouetted foreground. Photographed from an undisclosed location in Western Maine, this shot includes quite a bit of light pollution & some fast moving cloud cover. Most of the light pollution in this image is coming from Farmington, Maine which is about 35 miles from this location. The footage from this time lapse will be featured in my upcoming short film Shot In The Dark.
Nikon D600 & 14-24 @ 14mm
f/2.8 - 30 secs - ISO 3200 – WB Kelvin 3570
06/23/14 – 11:07PM
Processed via Lightroom 5 & Photoshop CS5
Prints & Portfolio: http://goo.gl/hxKp3C
On 500px: http://500px.com/photo/74939175
On Flickr: http://goo.gl/KI5xv4
2014 Night Photography Workshops: http://goo.gl/158Ntf
© Mike Taylor - Taylor Photography
http://miketaylorphoto.com
Cheers! Feel free to share this image if you dig it and thanks for your support.
#taylorphotography #iridiumflare #miketaylorphoto #nightsky #photography #timelapse #longexposure #maine #nightphotography #lightroom #photoshop #smugmugpro #photographyworkshops #nightphotographyworkshops #milkywayphotography #astrophotography #cosmos #ida #darkskies #lightpollution
#friday #weekend #landscapephotography Landscape Photography Landscape Photography Show Margaret Tompkins Jim Warthman Kevin Rowe Johan Peijnenburg David Heath Williams Tom Hierl Carolyn Lim Tom Sloan Howard L. Smith Kai Kosonen Tony Heyward Sheila B. DuBois Sandra Brown Vishal Kumar Toshi Nakamura #hqsplandscape #HQSPNight HQSP Landscape curated by Hallie Guilfoyle Michael Garza Nader El Assy Vinod Krishnamoorthy Luca Ferroglio midori chan #themagicoflight Curators Ray Bilcliff Hamid Dastmalchi Paul Stein #nightphotographyfriday
#10000photographers by Robert SKREINER
10000 PHOTOGRAPHERS LANDSCAPE Photos
#BTPLandscapePro BTP Landscape Pro Nancy Dempsey Best Top Photographer Group #Nightscapes Nightscapes curated by Jesse Martineau Patrick Zeiler and Valesa Diamontes #googleplusphotos Google+ Photos #stunningmoment by Alycia Miller Zvonimir Fras #promotephotography Promote Photography #showyourbestwork #science #scienceeveryday
Comentários
Postar um comentário