The Orionid meteor bathe peaked on the nights of Oct. 21-23, delighting fortunate stargazers with a stunning pure fireworks show as particles from Halley’s Comet collided with Earth’s ambiance to create fiery taking pictures stars within the night time sky.
Photographer Osama Fathi was amongst these fortunate skywatchers, and captured a spectacular view of Orionid meteors streaking via the sky over Lake Qarun in Egypt on Oct. 19, because the bathe ramped up exercise forward of its 3-day peak.
“This composite picture combines a number of meteor frames captured over three hours from Qatrani, close to the northern fringe of the lake,” Fathi instructed Area.com in an electronic mail. “Out of greater than 200 pictures taken throughout the session, solely a handful of vivid meteors aligned gracefully close to the constellation Orion — seen on the heart proper of the body.”
Fathi’s composite skyscape was created by combining a three-minute publicity of the night time sky with a number of 10-second pictures of meteors captured utilizing a Nikon Z6 digicam fitted with a 14-24 mm Nikkor lens.
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If clouds conspired to spoil your view throughout the Oct. 21-23 peak, there is not any want to fret, as there will be a lot extra taking pictures stars to see within the coming days, in line with Robert Lunsford of the American Meteor Society. “Charges will fall very slowly after these dates so the mornings of October 24-26 will nonetheless present hourly charges in extra of 10 per hour when viewing from rural darkish skies,” Lunsford instructed Area.com in an electronic mail. “Notice by then the radiant could have moved eastward into western Gemini so people shouldn’t be stunned to see these meteors taking pictures from that constellation as an alternative of Orion”.
Photographers eager about capturing their very own taking pictures stars ought to try our information to imaging meteor showers, together with our roundups of the prime cameras and lenses for astrophotography.
Editor’s Notice: If you want to share your astrophotography with Area.com’s readers, then please ship your photograph(s), feedback, and your identify and placement to spacephotos@house.com.
