Difference between revisions of "November 7, 2010"

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<div>You can support LPOD when you buy any book from Amazon thru [http://www.lpod.org/?page_id=591 LPOD!]<br />
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<p><b>Yesterday's LPOD:</b> [[November 6, 2010|Competing Processes]] </p>
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<p><b>Tomorrow's LPOD:</b> [[November 8, 2010|Why So Many Rilles?]] </p>
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Revision as of 11:44, 7 February 2015

It's Just a Phase

LPOD-Nov7-10.jpg
image by Stefano De Rosa

A lunar crescent makes the twilight sky magical. Especially near sunrise from a mountain pass of the Alps at 1,000 meters above sea level and 50 kilometers from Turin. Stefano captured the lovely pair of Venus and the Moon in twilight colors above a fog bank that draped the valley below like vaporous sea waves - here is the entire scene (as well as the following sunrise). The old Moon, tired from nearly a month's service of illuminating the Earth, is only a sliver of its former self. In contrast, Venus looks plump with only a small bite revealing its phase. But the camera lies; Venus has just passed inferior conjunction and seen thru a telescope it is slender, with a phase nearly matching the Moon's. I suppose the 1/25th second exposure, needed for the faint Moon, bloomed out the brightness of the planet. Even distortion can be beautiful.

Chuck Wood

Technical Details
Nov. 5, 2010, 6;45 local time. Canon EOS 1000d , Exp: 1/25 sec; F/5.6; ISO 100; focal length 250mm.

Related Links
Stefano's website


Yesterday's LPOD: Competing Processes

Tomorrow's LPOD: Why So Many Rilles?


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