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Solstice Meteor

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The milky way was shining brilliantly on the morning of summer solstice, the shortest night of the year. Thin clouds were making haloes around the brighter stars and the planet Saturn. A long exposure revealed colors invisible to the human eye, including green airglow and purple nebulae. There wasn't a meteor shower going on, but I captured this bright random meteor in one of the time lapse frames. On any given night there are an average of 6 sporadic meteors per hour visible under a dark sky. The skies here were very dark, with amazing views of the Bighorn Mountains in every direction. This was taken from a fire lookout tower on the 9,500' summit of Black Mountain.

Copyright
Kevin Palmer
Image Size
6016x4016 / 14.0MB
Keywords
2017, airglow, astronomy, astrophotography, bighorn mountains, bighorn national forest, black mountain, clouds, dark, galaxy, green, haloes, june, kevin palmer, meteor, midnight, milky way, night, nikon d750, peak, sagittarius, saturn, shooting star, sky, snow capped, solstice, space, spring, starry, stars, summer, summit, wyoming
Contained in galleries
Wyoming, Night Sky
The milky way was shining brilliantly on the morning of summer solstice, the shortest night of the year. Thin clouds were making haloes around the brighter stars and the planet Saturn. A long exposure revealed colors invisible to the human eye, including green airglow and purple nebulae. There wasn't a meteor shower going on, but I captured this bright random meteor in one of the time lapse frames. On any given night there are an average of 6 sporadic meteors per hour visible under a dark sky. The skies here were very dark, with amazing views of the Bighorn Mountains in every direction. This was taken from a fire lookout tower on the 9,500' summit of Black Mountain.