Tuesday, December 25, 2018

ISS - Part 2

My dad, now in his early seventies, having seen the wide angle shot of the ISS (see the post ISS - Part 1) mentioned that they used to watch Russian satellites as kids from the terrace of their home in Calcutta (Golpark) based on schedules published in local dailies.  This made me think that we should be able to do something more advanced in 50 years time.



Turns out, a "household" telescope can actually see details on an object about the size of a football field (70m X 200m)  flying at 34 times the speed of a commercial aircraft (17,000 miles/hr) in low earth orbit (250 miles above earth).

The photo above was taken on December 25, 2018 at 6:13 a.m. EST.


Saturday, December 22, 2018

ISS - Part 1

International space station flying over our neighborhood at 6:22 a.m. on Dec 22, 2018. Shot with a wide angle lens and a composite of several timelapse shots to create the streak (center to left of frame).



Friday, July 4, 2014

Big Dipper - Saptarshi

One of my first constellation photos. The Big Dipper/ Saptarshi (সপ্তর্ষি মন্ডল ).

Taken from the balcony of my second floor apartment in Woodbridge New Jersey ion July 4, 2014.  This west facing balcony that offered a restricted view of the sky and overlooked a parking lot was my first "observatory" where my budding interest in astronomy took root. Little did I know that the hobby with stay with me into the next decade.




Wednesday, December 25, 2013

Chasing Orion - first light



"..This is an image of the Orion Nebula - a star forming region in the Orion constellation (Kalpurush/কালপুরুষ  in Bangla) as seen from my balcony in New Jersey on 25th December 2013 between 1 and 3 a.m in the south western sky.

The nebula is more than 1,400 light years from earth. So the light captured here has been travelling for 1,400 years.To put it in perspective, the light started near the end of the Gupta Empire in India and landed on my camera sensor on Christmas of 2013). "

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Thus began my email I wrote to a friend in 2013. It was the day after I had made my first deep sky photo using only a camera, a tripod and a computer (yes, no telescope). He was a friend from my undergraduate days, now a professor in the UK and shared some of my excitement. The email continued ...