BBC Astronomer Misses Meteor During Live Show 116
krou writes "BBC astronomer Mark Thompson wasn't having a good night for the BBC's Stargazing Live show. He turned to the camera to complain of poor cloud visibility and a lack of activity in the sky ... only for a meteor to shoot past in the background. A rather sheepish Thompson said, 'I must admit I was oblivious to it. I think I'm probably the only person in the entire country who didn't see it.' (YouTube video of the original live footage)."
Re:Wow, live stargazing is a TV show in England? (Score:5, Informative)
Also they were using imagine intensifiers (Score:5, Informative)
... so even if he had been facing it it wouldn't have been nearly as bright to his eyes as it was on the camera. In fact it might have been too dim to see at all with the naked eye.
Slashdot confirms it (Score:2, Informative)
Must be some really nice stuff the editors are smoking for this to pass as front page material.
Re:Wow, live stargazing is a TV show in England? (Score:5, Informative)
Re:And this is news? (Score:4, Informative)
I knew somebody who blinked in around 95% of photos. Even a fake count-down didn't throw them off.
Actually, that's fairly common. Most camera's use a short pre-flash to adjust their light levels when you press the shutter button. This is followed a few milliseconds later by the actual flash used to take the picture. Some people with sensitive eyes will blink at the pre-flash and end up with their eyes closed in most flash pictures.
I used to have a Nikon DSLR camera that could be programmed to emit the pre-flash when a certain button was pressed. I'd hit the pre-flash button first, then take the actual picture (sans pre-flash) a few seconds later. Worked miracles for my wife who is a blinker.
My new camera (a newer Nikon DSLR) doesn't see to make people blink, so either it doesn't use a pre-flash, or it's so fast that there's no time for people to react.