Lunar Eclipse On May 15-16 20
Sayten241 writes "MSNBC reports that on the night of May 15-16 skywatchers in the U.S., Europe and Africa will be able to witness the moon be completely eclipsed by the Earth's shadow. The show starts at 9:45 pm ET but starts getting good around 10:03 pm ET. The next Lunar eclipse will be on Nov 8-9 this year."
Coincidence? (Score:5, Funny)
The truth... (Score:4, Funny)
May 15th? (Score:1)
When photographing a lunar eclipse . . . (Score:5, Informative)
The first time I photographed the moon I tried long exposure times, in the range of 2-8 seconds when the film returned the moon was a bright white blob with no detail. The moon is basically a rock that is being hit by direct sunlight and to get a good exposure you need to expose your film as if you were shooting a snapshot on a bright sunny day.
One guideline I find helpful is the "Sunny 16 rule": For a subject in direct sunlight set your f-stop to 16, and your shutter speed to closely match the speed of your film. Eg ISO 200 and shutter speed of 1/250.
Double exposure (Score:2, Informative)
There is also the loony f4 rule for shooting fullmoon lit landscapes. Set the aperture to f/4 and open the shutter for 1/ASA days. ie 100 speed film =1/100*24*60 ~ 15 minutes. Shoot a landscape 1/3rd + 2/3rds sky without the moon, then double expose with the eclipsed
Re:When photographing a lunar eclipse . . . (Score:2, Informative)
I've taken eclipse exposures, and I can concur with the other article. You don't need long exposures, but you do need a nice long lens if you've got it.
Truly... (Score:4, Funny)
More Information (Score:5, Informative)
It also has details for future eclipses.
Re:More Information (Score:2)
i.e. it's visible pretty much everywhere where it's dark around 10pm ET.
Cultural Bias? (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Cultural Bias? (Score:2)
It goes on later to say, "The total phase of the upcoming event will be visible across much of North America, all of South America, as well as central and western Europe and most of Africa (except the extreme eastern part)."
The submitter is merely an idiot.
Inconstant Moon (Score:2)