I ventured out to Guelph Lake Thursday evening to observe and try to photograph this year’s Geminid meteor shower. For about an hour, from 12:30-1:30 AM, I sat on top of the dam and watched as more than 50 pieces of ancient asteroid burned up in Earth’s atmosphere. It was one of the most spectacular meteor showers I’ve witnessed, and was well worth bundling up and staying out late!
While just witnessing this year’s Geminid Meteor shower was exciting, I was finally able to capture a few pieces of the doomed asteroid on camera.
Guelph Lake is a mere 5 minutes outside of the city of Guelph, and as you can see in the second photo, there is plenty of light pollution affecting our view of the sky (that big yellow glow is the Greater Toronto Area off in the distance). Luckily there are some places that still enjoy dark night skies, but for the most part they require some dedication and travel to get to.
Phil Plait (aka @BadAstronomer) has some beautiful photos of the Geminids shared by his readers over at his blog Bad Astronomy.
Photos captured with a Nikon D700 & Nikkor 18-70mm lens (F3.5, 20 secs, ISO 500, Tripod).
Beautiful photos Morgan! I completely forgot about the meteor shower… Still kicking myself over that one, but at least I can live vicariously through you!
Thanks DW! It was definitely one of the most active meteor showers I’ve seen thus far, so maybe you’ll still be able to see some this weekend if you get good weather.
wow, great exposure, great framing, really top notch photos!
Thanks Brian!
I have yet to see a meteor shower. It always seems to be cloudy whenever the geminids come around. So I have to, like DW, live vicariously through pictures.
Best place would have been our back yard….;)