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Aircraft on the Moon? Whats the chances of that?
We'll actually the chances are quite good, since it happens more frequebtly than one thinks, especially if you live within 50 miles of any airport. Yes, it is a real unaltered image, It happened by chance. It was captured back in 1994 from my friends backyard in Berkley, Michigan. I used my old Sony camcorder to record Moon craters and the Appenine Mt. region on the Moon. Suddenly, I saw a big dark blurr go through the view finder, I looked up and realized I had captured an aircraft on footage. This is 4 single frames stacked to knock down the noise from a single 1/30 sec video frame. After my buddy Barry did some calculations on the wing span of a 747, and the size of the known craters visible, accounting for the moons distance on average that day, the aircarft was at ~38,000 ft. when it passed in front of the moon. Usually aircraft ruin my long time exposures of deep space by leaving blinking light trails, but this shot was faster than the blinking lights and came out pretty cool!
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Best Regards, John Chumack The Chumack Observatories MPC 838 Dayton Research Station MPC H66 Yellow Springs Research Station www.galacticimages.com |
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Hi Duane,
thanks for the compliment, Actually I did send them both it many years ago, As Astronomy and S&T have published dozens of my images over the years, but this one never made the magazine back in 94. Maybe I'll send it again to the new editors, as they do change photo editors every few years. You can see my latest image in Astronomy Magazine in the article about Einstein page 50, its Sirius the Brightest Star in the sky, 30 minute exposure, 100 ISO Kodak Royal Gold Film.
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Best Regards, John Chumack The Chumack Observatories MPC 838 Dayton Research Station MPC H66 Yellow Springs Research Station www.galacticimages.com |
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What a lucky pic to get ~ nice one mate
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ŠTRÒÑÓMY~ÑÕW |