Entries tagged as camera
astronomy Moon Sanyo VPC-C4 satellite Minolta Dimage X20 binoculars Chuseok telescope eclipse Kodak Z1085 IS star Sun iPhone 4 Canon SX50 HS planet Saturn constellation Lyra lightning ISS Jupiter iPhone 5S Canon EOS 450D Venus C/2013 R1 Lovejoy comet CHDK smog airplane Boötes Andromeda galaxy flare Iridium Alhena Orion Mars Celine Chung Hayun Chung HT-Mini v2 toy MetOp-A Ursa Minor Leo Minor Ursa Major China iOS iOS 8 Korea lunar calendar Bushnell 8x40 iPhone 6 Plus A1522 A1524 fog Naju iPhone 7 Plus Bitgaram City Sony A5000 beach firework Ulsan Nikon CoolPix P1000 almond nuts walnut KPX Celestron NexStar 6SE Snapzoom asteroid Josephina Neptune Triton teleconverter duck river Sung-Eun Kim Yeongsan cafeteria ice persimmon Korean dress rice cake beverage chocolate dwarf planet Pluto Jeonnam Science Festival Messier 11 Messier 2 adapter iPhone 6S Plus artificial star collimation LED focal reducer iPhone 11 Pro Singapore travel Uranus Bode's Galaxy Cigar Galaxy iOptron SkyTracker Ceres Heze Vesta Zeta Virginis C/2014 Q2 Lovejoy nebula Taurus road shade cat assembly kit car cup Starbucks Bolt EV electric SpaceX electric vehicle Sight Knight visor Jeonju iPhone 13 Pro Gunsan space station Tiangong 3DMark Geekbench iPhone 3GS iPhone 4S iPhone 5 Octane SunSpider Touch ID battery PeaceKeeper charger box iPhone 6+ iPhone 7 sound A1533 AT&T A1530 LTE SK Telecom slow motion fingerprint sensor M7 pedometer Cortex Camera Kraken performance accelerometer compass gyroscope A1586 iPad iPad mini iPhone 6 Vega LTE-A A1549 iPhone 5C belt case OIS Focus Pixels barometer M8 KT LGU+ Han-gang Seoul passcode VoIP VoLTE Reachability screen protector A1633 A1634 A1687 A1688 iPhone 6S Canada Hong Kong Japan T-Mobile USA Verizon game Simpsons: Tapped Out Comic Life OS X Crop-Size image resizer Resize Image Resize Photo SimpleResize Apple Watch iOS 9 watch watchOS 2 cable Micro-USB USB iOS 12 iPad Pro 9.7 iPhone X iPhone XS apple iOS 13 memory MicroSD storage 2011 iOS 5.0.1 build 9A405 Christmas tree decoration balls lights sled snow screwdriver table cookie milk Oreo Homeplus pizza chocolate chip cookies couch FaceTime New Year's Day Skype tteokguk computer swing Toys R Us trampoline Mega Kids Box Megabox movie theatre Wesley Woo-Duk Hwang-Chung tortilla wrap toothbrush salad Disney Frozen remote controlled helicopter repair replacement Syma S107G Danish butter cookies animation Larva shopping cart electric fan light trail M&M's cooler Mac mini tailor desk wire emart shopping electricity fluorescent light LG Prada 3.0 light fixture Seojun Electric smart meter TopLux Sigma LED BuyBeam BL-628 lamp power switch Chevrolet Bluetooth sanitizer ultraviolet department store Shinsegae beam projector Dongwon tuna subway Apple Store Fukuoka Fukuoka Airport Incheon International Airport leather case screen Screen Glue Ferris wheel Goat Simulator COEX Chungjang-ro Gwangju Genmob GPS pen cellphone Apple Pay credit card debit card NFC RFID Manually Costco restaurant Myeongdong Daiso stand pencil app Domino's Pizza dock earphone speaker App Store news newspaper interview A1779 baseball Lego Oxford Block building construction store
Today’s “The Toon-Box”
Posted by Wesley onToday’s “The Toon-Box”
Posted by Wesley onThe two satellites
Posted by Wesley on
Night sky is home to various satellites, both natural and artificial. I've taken photos of these objects in the past few days and here are a couple them for you to enjoy.
The Iridium satellites are known for their flares caused by the interesting shape of their antennae. I had a chance to observe Iridium 97 moving down the northern sky with my iPhone XS. While the satellite shined noticeably for about twenty seconds, this merging of a 1-minute, 610-photo session reveals that it was still dimly visible for some time before and after that. The rest of the satellite reflects the sunlight, just not as effectively.
Device: iPhone XS
Settings: 26mm - ISO 2500 - 1/15s - f/1.8
Filters: None
Time: 2019-02-17 19:04:46-19:05:46 KST
Location: Naju, Korea
610 photos merged with Startrails 2.3
This lunar year's first Full Moon (Jeongwol Daeboreum) was coincidentally a Super Moon. A bigger one would not appear until December 24, 2026. I took this photo just moments after the phase reached its peak, with a visible size of 34' 02.37" and a distance of 350,840km. As a result, it appears nearly 4,000 pixels wide (3,955 pixels, 0.516"/pixel). Unless I keep using the P1000 seven years later, this would be the largest photo of the Moon this camera would ever take.
Device: Nikon P1000
Settings: 3000mm - ISO 100 - 1/400s - f/8
Filters: None
Time: 2019-02-20 01:11:49, 01:14:07 KST
Location: Naju, Korea
2 photos merged with Pixelmator 3.8.1
The Iridium satellites are known for their flares caused by the interesting shape of their antennae. I had a chance to observe Iridium 97 moving down the northern sky with my iPhone XS. While the satellite shined noticeably for about twenty seconds, this merging of a 1-minute, 610-photo session reveals that it was still dimly visible for some time before and after that. The rest of the satellite reflects the sunlight, just not as effectively.
Device: iPhone XS
Settings: 26mm - ISO 2500 - 1/15s - f/1.8
Filters: None
Time: 2019-02-17 19:04:46-19:05:46 KST
Location: Naju, Korea
610 photos merged with Startrails 2.3
This lunar year's first Full Moon (Jeongwol Daeboreum) was coincidentally a Super Moon. A bigger one would not appear until December 24, 2026. I took this photo just moments after the phase reached its peak, with a visible size of 34' 02.37" and a distance of 350,840km. As a result, it appears nearly 4,000 pixels wide (3,955 pixels, 0.516"/pixel). Unless I keep using the P1000 seven years later, this would be the largest photo of the Moon this camera would ever take.
Device: Nikon P1000
Settings: 3000mm - ISO 100 - 1/400s - f/8
Filters: None
Time: 2019-02-20 01:11:49, 01:14:07 KST
Location: Naju, Korea
2 photos merged with Pixelmator 3.8.1
Clearest view of ISS yet from Nikon P1000
Posted by Wesley onInternational Space Station seen on the evening of February 11, 2019
Animation of the ISS overpass
The Space Station came closest to the observer on 18:48:49 (third photo) at a distance of 428km. Altitude from the ground was 411km at the time. You can see that the shots before that had the Zvezda module (lowest point in the second photo at 18:48:19) pointing at the observer, while the shorts after that had the Kibo-Harmony-Columbus modules (lower part of the middle section in the fifth photo at 18:49:49) doing that. Another thing to note is that I was looking at the general direction of the Sun, which had just had set below the horizon, before the space station made the closest approach. As the solar panels are always facing the Sun, I would be looking at the back of them in the first and the second photos, which is why they aren't illuminated and visible there.
Device: Nikon P1000
Settings: 3000mm - ISO 100 - 1/400 to 1/640s - f/8
Filters: None
Time: 2019-02-11 18:48-18:50 KST
Location: Naju, Korea