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The Lunar eclipse of May 15, 2022. During mid eclipse, with the Moon quite dim, many stars can be seen and photographed near the Moon. In this view, stars a bit fainter than magnitude 14 were recorded. Stars that faint can be seen visually in telescopes with at least 8-inches (20 cm) aperture. The image was made from the Denver metro area (Bortle 6) with the Moon low in the sky.
The bright blue star just to the upper right of the Moon is HIP 76033A, a magnitude 6.25 star in the Constellation Libra.
Technical. The image was obtained with a stock Canon EOS R5 Mirrorless Digital Camera and Canon 100-400 L IS zoom lens at 400mm. The copper-colored Moon at mid eclipse plus the stars is a High Dynamic Range image (HDR) using two exposures: 1) three exposures at 2 seconds at f/5.6, ISO 800, and 2) 90 exposures 8 seconds at f/5.6, ISO 800. The total exposure time was 12 minutes for the stars, 6 seconds for the Moon. With such long exposures, the Moon and stars were tracked using a Fornax Lighttrack II mount. The image is a cropped section of the full image. Full image plate scale is 2.26 arc-seconds / pixel, and the image here is at 4.5 arc-seconds / pixel.
To learn how to obtain stunning images like this, please visit my Extensive Articles on Photography .
Keywords to this image = astrophoto-1 moon eclipse night low-light digital_astro canon_r5
Image ID: moon-eclipse-stars-rnclark-c05-15-2022_av93.i-c1s.jpg
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Last updated September 05, 2024