Iridium Flare on my 48th bday; 85mm/4 image stack
Background story:
Yesterday was my 48th birthday, and while my wife was at gymnastics with my 6 yr old son I just came home from soccer practice with my 8 yr old daughter and 4 yr old son.
I checked Heavens-above.com for anything "neat" happening later in the evening.
Well, 15 minutes later @ 8:06pm there was gonna be a -8mag Iridium flare! It's on my "Top 10 in 2010 to shoot" list
So, I quickly got the gear, went outside, set-up @ 45 deg up and 10 deg North (where the flare was going to appear), and took shots.
This was only my 2nd Iridium flare, and my 1st capture.
My 2 kids at home saw it as well, we all were amazed at how bright a -8mag is, like a torch lighting up in the sky. Way cool to see, my wife and son just missed it.
Quick prep;
Taking test shots for background brightness, etc, again I used Jupiter to focus (those moons pinpoint absolute infinity, can barely make them out in 10x live mode @ 85mm).
Settings were ISO800, f5.6, 85mm on my 15-85, 6 sec each exposure.
I started the continuous capture @ 8:03:02pm, and took 40 light frames, 14 dark frames, and 10 bias frames.
The flare hit at 8:06:46pm, Heavens-above predictions were spot on this event!
(I'll have to record my capture into their database.)
The flare lasted about 21 seconds or so, each frame being 6 seconds and 1 second gap between frames.
While not dead centered, I captured 95% or so.
Setting altitude is relatively easy with a carpenters triangle, however for the 10 deg Azimuth I did my best at finding true north (Polaris), set my ballhead to zero/360 via tripod legs rotation, then rotated the ballhead to 10 degrees.
I was slightly off but for not having my compass outside pretty close for eyeballing.
Next time I'll use the 50mm prime instead of shooting at 85mm to capture more surrounding sky in the image.
result via DSS:
Once the flare subsided I continued to watch the satellite for another 10-15 seconds, my thoughts still aglow from watching the flare event.
Background story:
Yesterday was my 48th birthday, and while my wife was at gymnastics with my 6 yr old son I just came home from soccer practice with my 8 yr old daughter and 4 yr old son.
I checked Heavens-above.com for anything "neat" happening later in the evening.
Well, 15 minutes later @ 8:06pm there was gonna be a -8mag Iridium flare! It's on my "Top 10 in 2010 to shoot" list
So, I quickly got the gear, went outside, set-up @ 45 deg up and 10 deg North (where the flare was going to appear), and took shots.
This was only my 2nd Iridium flare, and my 1st capture.
My 2 kids at home saw it as well, we all were amazed at how bright a -8mag is, like a torch lighting up in the sky. Way cool to see, my wife and son just missed it.
Quick prep;
Taking test shots for background brightness, etc, again I used Jupiter to focus (those moons pinpoint absolute infinity, can barely make them out in 10x live mode @ 85mm).
Settings were ISO800, f5.6, 85mm on my 15-85, 6 sec each exposure.
I started the continuous capture @ 8:03:02pm, and took 40 light frames, 14 dark frames, and 10 bias frames.
The flare hit at 8:06:46pm, Heavens-above predictions were spot on this event!
(I'll have to record my capture into their database.)
The flare lasted about 21 seconds or so, each frame being 6 seconds and 1 second gap between frames.
While not dead centered, I captured 95% or so.
Setting altitude is relatively easy with a carpenters triangle, however for the 10 deg Azimuth I did my best at finding true north (Polaris), set my ballhead to zero/360 via tripod legs rotation, then rotated the ballhead to 10 degrees.
I was slightly off but for not having my compass outside pretty close for eyeballing.
Next time I'll use the 50mm prime instead of shooting at 85mm to capture more surrounding sky in the image.
result via DSS:
Once the flare subsided I continued to watch the satellite for another 10-15 seconds, my thoughts still aglow from watching the flare event.