Multifaceted Eclipse
The solar eclipse was absolutely incredible. There's no way to capture it in 1 picture or 1,000 pictures and there's nothing really to compare it to. During the minutes surrounding totality the light changed so fast and there was so much to observe and photograph that it was overwhelming. It felt like time stood still and yet it was all over in an instant. I listened to the dozens of people around me who also climbed the 10,276' Laramie Peak to observe this eclipse. Cheering and exclamations of "WOW" were an almost involuntary reaction.
This is a composite showing 3 partial phases of the eclipse with a solar filter, as well as 3 of the features that are visible during totality. A group of sunspots was visible before being hidden by the moon. The red fringes on the left are solar prominences. Bigger than any planet, prominences are made up of dynamic loops of hot plasma and will often explode. This outer atmosphere of the sun is sculpted by it's magnetic field. The temperature of the corona is up to 450 times hotter than the surface of the sun and no one knows why. At the top right is an effect known as the "diamond ring." It is the moment the first bit of sun emerges from behind the moon. I was surprised by just how suddenly it popped out, with all the brightness of the sun concentrated into a single point.
- Copyright
- Kevin_Palmer
- Image Size
- 6022x4015 / 4.0MB
- Keywords
-
2017, astronomical, astronomy, astrophotography, august, august 21st, chromosphere, composite, corona, darkness, diamond ring, eclipse, effect, halo, hexagon, kevin palmer, laramie peak, magnetic, medicine bow national forest, moon, nikon 180mm f2.8, nikon d5500, orange, partial, phases, rare, red, six, solar eclipse, solar filter, summer, sun, sunburst, sunspots, telephoto, total solar eclipse, totality, wyoming
- Contained in galleries
- Wyoming