tiabunna

tiabunna club

Posted: 01 Jun 2019


Taken: 03 Jan 2013

18 favorites     18 comments    382 visits

1/50 ISO 12800

PENTAX K-30

EXIF - See more details

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Keywords

astronomy
Jupiter
moons
Science/weather
manual focus
prime lens
Tokina 1:5.6 400mm


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Photo replaced on 25 May 2019
382 visits


Jupiter & moons

Jupiter & moons
Today I flickered past another photo community I once visited often, and realised I hadn't posted this image here. In 2013, with Jupiter high and bright, I wanted a photo of Jupiter with its moons. It was easier said than done! Although I could get Jupiter, in long telephoto the long exposures needed for the moons resulted in significant motion blur. The only alternative was a very high ISO (12800 @ 1/50) which left Jupiter just a bright white circle. So I did the "HDR thing" and substituted a correctly exposed Jupiter image. Best viewed on black.

HaarFager, Nora Caracci, Sven Scholz, Fred Fouarge and 14 other people have particularly liked this photo


18 comments - The latest ones
 Herb Riddle
Herb Riddle club
It worked well George. The amount of noise looks almost like an asteroid field but I would have never guessed that this could be Jupiter but then I can see the giant cloud ring. You need a tracker like Steve has, perhaps? All the same your effort has paid off and produced a great astro photo. Well done.

Regards, Herb
4 years ago. Edited 4 years ago.
tiabunna club has replied to Herb Riddle club
Many thanks, Herb. Unfortunately I don't think a tracker would help much here, because the movement of the moons is also around Jupiter and therefore not the same as starfields in relation to us.
4 years ago.
Ko Hummel club has replied to tiabunna club
I think tracking will help a bit. Most of the blurring occurs because of the unsteady earth atmosphere. Have a look in my album on planets
4 years ago.
 Pam J
Pam J club
BRILLIANT GEORGE !!!

SHOWING JAY TOO
4 years ago.
 Ko Hummel
Ko Hummel club
that's the only way to get it right. Use two exposures. A fine view of Jupiter and its moons
4 years ago.
Herb Riddle club has replied to Ko Hummel club
And there was I , thinking that such tricks only happened in landscape photography Ko. As you say though, to show this to our restricted human eyes, we have to give a little help and in this case (like in some country landscapes) the ends certainly justify the means. ~ Herb
4 years ago.
 Malik Raoulda
Malik Raoulda club
Bien vu et bien rendu... Bon Weekend.
4 years ago.
 Jean
Jean
That is so impressive.
4 years ago.
 William Sutherland
William Sutherland club
Superb capture!

Admired in:
www.ipernity.com/group/tolerance
4 years ago.
 slgwv
slgwv club
I'm impressed, George!
4 years ago.
 Gudrun
Gudrun club
I also am impressed:-)
4 years ago.
 GrahamH
GrahamH club
I've tried for this shot but my tele isn't tele enough and there is an ISO deficiency. Congratulations on making a great image.
4 years ago.
 Janet Brien
Janet Brien club
My mind has been blown.

Totally incredible!!!!

Some day maybe I'll try for something like this but for now, I'll just be staggered by your talent! :)
4 years ago.
 RHH
RHH
Excellent work.
4 years ago.
 Nora Caracci
Nora Caracci club
great catch and work !
4 years ago.
 HaarFager
HaarFager club
This is great! That's exactly what I did to get both Jupiter and it's moons exposed properly. But, I used a regular daytime ISO and about a 1/30 of a second.
4 years ago.
tiabunna club has replied to HaarFager club
Thank you for your kind comment. Yes, the Jupiter part of my image was taken on something like those settings, it was the moons part that needed the extra ISO for them to show up.
4 years ago.

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