Speed London, ON June 2012 |
This is what a magnitude -3.4 pass of the International Space Station almost directly overhead looks like. Well, not quite. It actually looks like a simple moving dot in the sky, barely distinguishable from an airplane save for the fact that it doesn't have flashing lights. And we all know a small, dim dot in a dark sky wouldn't photograph all that well. So instead I left the shutter open for exactly 44.4 seconds and this is the result.
I didn't intend to leave it open for 44.4 seconds. But I was late running out the door, so I spent a little too much time fumbling with the tripod and camera settings. Which didn't leave me a whole lot of time to precisely meter and lock in a set shutter speed. Hence the photo improv job that had me standing on a darkened sidewalk pointing my remote control at the camera and, in the absence of a methodically planned shot, trying to count seconds (badly) as I tried to guess (also badly) how much light was enough, too much, or just enough.
In the end, I think the shot sorta worked. And thanks to Twitter, I got to share it with some other folks in London, who in turn told their friends (sounds like Suave shampoo commercial, doesn't it?) who also ran outside and saw the magical dance in the heavens. Neat.
I use this site, heavens-above.com, to predict when the best passes will be in my area. If you're looking for a neat activity to share - with kids, friends, anyone - you could do worse than stare way up and wonder about the wonders high above us.
Your turn: What makes you wonder?
One more thing: What does this have to do with abstract? Everything. It weighs almost a million pounds, stretches a football field in length, flies around the earth at 28,000 km/h (which would get me to the TV station in, oh, 1.2 seconds) and is currently home to 6 astronauts/cosmonauts who stay there for up to 6 months at a stretch, protected from the ravages of space by some of the best technology humankind has yet devised. Yet from the average person's vantage point, it's a dot in the sky. As you stand alone on a darkened sidewalk, you have to squeeze your brain a whole lot to appreciate what it means as it silently marches through the sky. Sounds pretty abstract, doesn't it? Click here to share your own abstract Thematic vision.
Such a cool shot! and thanks for the link :)
ReplyDeleteWell, your impromptu photographing worked quite well, it's a fantastic shot. And your comments make one wonder about all the human made stuff we have out there circling our planet, and if there are any aliens passing through our solar system, how they could miss that there is (at least some) intelligent life on this planet.
ReplyDeletethat is an excellent way to show the unshowable. . . like sky shots with sun-filled clouds, or lava flowing...You achieved something here. Now you're a PHOTO-journalist as well? YES!
ReplyDeleteAloha from Honolulu,
Comfort Spiral
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As you stand alone on a darkened sidewalk, you have to squeeze your brain a whole lot to appreciate what it means as it silently marches through the sky.
ReplyDeleteAnd you hope it doesn't step on you, says the ant.
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Sometimes the best photos are taken "by accident," but it appears you captured this perfectly however intended or not :-)
ReplyDeleteThanks for your visit to my new blog. I would love to re-link w/you if that's ok! :-)