The symmetry (or lack thereof) in this #TotalEclipse2017 composite messes with my (selective) OCD, but as I previously mentioned, clouds and rain prevented the evenly-spaced time-lapse I had planned, so this is the closest I can come up with (at least on the little sleep I'm operating on) at the moment.
These were all taken through the 8" Celestron telescope (with a focal reducer), and it shows on the left roughly 14 minutes of the Sun before totality (center) and then 18 minutes of the Sun after totality on the right. The telescope was fairly faithful in its tracking of the Sun, and the camera was driven by Jared Haworth's computer.
Photos were taken at Shaw Air Force Base with the great help of the F-16 Viper Demo Team.
Tags: Eclipse Eclipse2017 F16 F16ViperDemoTeam GreatAmericanEclipse Michael Seeley Mike Seeley Shaw Air Force Base South Carolina Sumter
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And the day turned to night: quick car edits of the #Eclipse2017 as seen from Shaw Air Force Base over the F-16 Viper Demo Team.
It was magical. Clouds and occasional light rain would harass us through much of time before the totality, and maybe 90 seconds before the moment we were all waiting for, there was a cloud in the way.
But, it moved.
I'll try to cobble together a time-lapse out of the cloudy pre- and post-totality shots, but for now, here is a shot showing the two F-16 Fighting Falcons under the eclipse.
#TotalEclipse2017, seen from Shaw Air Force Base, over the F-16 Viper Demo Team.
Specs:
ISO500, f5, 1/6 second exposure time.
Tags: Eclipse Eclipse2017 F16 F16ViperDemoTeam GreatAmericanEclipse Michael Seeley Mike Seeley Shaw Air Force Base South Carolina Sumter
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The total solar eclipse of August 21, 2017, seen from Shaw Air Force Base in Sumter, South Carolina. In the foreground are two F-16 Fighting Falcons from the F-16 Viper Demo team, parked at the end of the runway for us to use as subjects.
Composited into the image are shots of the Sun as it marches toward (and then, away from) totality. I had set the interval timer to capture a frame every 5 minutes, but because of clouds (and, at times, rain), there is some inconsistency in the spacing and the exposure of the sun. The images represent two hours of motion, with the first image taken at 1:46 pm (ET) and the last frame taken at 3:45 pm. The flare of light (it is hard to make out in a wide shot like this, but it's almost the "diamond ring" effect) is the totality coming to an end, and this is the last image I would take before replacing the solar filter for the rest of the sequence.
Specs for the background image: ISO500, f11, .5 second exposure.
The settings for the shots of the sun vary widely depending on clouds and how far the eclipse had progressed.
And, because the sun was so high in the sky, I (naturally) framed the shot vertically and was shooting with a 17-40mm lens set to 23mm, on a full-frame Canon body.
And, again, big thanks to the Public Affairs and Communication teams at Shaw Air Force Base and to the F-16 Viper Demo team for moving these planes into position for us, and for being so entirely hospitable to the We Report Space team.
Tags: Eclipse Eclipse2017 F16 F16ViperDemoTeam GreatAmericanEclipse Michael Seeley Mike Seeley Shaw Air Force Base South Carolina Sumter
The total solar eclipse of August 21, 2017 seen through and 8" Celestron Telescope from Sumter, SC and Shaw Air Force Base.
Tags: Eclipse Eclipse2017 F16 F16ViperDemoTeam GreatAmericanEclipse Michael Seeley Mike Seeley Shaw Air Force Base South Carolina Sumter
© All Rights Reserved