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Old 20-12-2012, 01:37 AM
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naskies (Dave)
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Join Date: Jul 2011
Location: Brisbane
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Persistent train from Geminid meteor

Hi all,

I was very privileged to have observed hundreds of Geminids last week from dark skies in Leyburn, and also had a couple of Canon 5DmkIIs capturing time lapse images for half the evening.

I noticed that quite a few of the meteors I imaged had very noticeable persistent trains, such as this:

6.2 MB video

This bright Geminid streak in Cancer was just under 5 degrees long. If you watch the video carefully, you can see a persistent train grow larger and fainter during the video. Each frame was recorded for 10 sec at 35 mm, f/1.4, ISO 6400, and the duration of entire video is 14 min of elapsed time.

I've also created a montage of the time lapse:

2500x1285 montage (2 MB)

The left column shows the raw frames with enhanced contrast; the middle column has the sky background subtracted and then linearly stretched; and the right column has the sky background subtracted, inverted, and then stretched.

Hope you like it. Thanks for looking!



PS: if you look really carefully at the video, you'll also be able to spot 5 moving satellites, 3 geostationary satellites flaring, and 1 geostationary satellite at constant brightness.
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