The Photographer’s Ephemeris app (TPE for iOS) — one of two noteworthy Apple iOS apps for planning photo shoots of the Sun and Moon — is on sale for $3.99 this weekend only. That’s right, for two days only you can buy TPE for less than the price of LightTrac ($4.99), a similar yet much less robust app. Don’t sleep on this extraordinary offer!
Posts Tagged ‘astronomy’
Breaking news: TPE on sale this weekend only
April 16, 2011Light Snow on Cherry Blossoms
March 27, 2011One week after the March Equinox, sometimes called the Spring Equinox (in the Northern Hemisphere), it snowed in Washington, D.C. Although snow in late March is unusual in Washington, D.C., the latest measurable snowfall was recorded on 28 April 1898.
I went for a short photowalk to photograph snow on the cherry blossoms in the community where I live: light snow was falling when the photowalk began; the sky was clearing rapidly when the photowalk ended. According to the National Park Service, cherry blossoms around the Tidal Basin will peak on Tuesday, 29 March 2011.
Equinox sunrise
March 21, 2011I visited Huntley Meadows Park to photograph sunrise on the March Equinox, 20 March 2011. I used Theodolite Pro app to record a time series of geotagged screen captures beginning at 7:12 a.m., the official time of sunrise in Washington, D.C. on March 20th. On the equinoxes, the Sun rises due east (90 degrees azimuth) and sets due west (270 degrees azimuth). Looking at photo 1 of 6, notice that the camera is facing due east (090°) and the disk of the Sun is below the tree line at 7:12 a.m.; by the time the Sun is clearly visible at 7:28 a.m. (photo 5 of 6), the Sun had moved along its path across the sky to a point slightly south of east (see Editor’s Note, below).
I used Pro HDR app to shoot a composite image (shown above) of the scene looking eastward across the wetland. Notice there is some ghosting visible along the tree line, probably due to the fact that I was too cold to stay still for a handheld shot!
Related Resources:
- Position of the Sun on the horizon at sunrise/sunset (Flash required) – one of many excellent Astronomy Simulations and Animations from the University of Nebraska-Lincoln
- Sunrise Positions in Washington, D.C. – a one-year time series of photos
Editor’s Note: Sunrise is defined as the time of day when the Sun’s upper limb appears above the true horizon. From my viewpoint at Huntley Meadows Park, the true horizon was obscured by the visible horizon (the tree line). Therefore, I was unable to see the Sun‘s disk on March 20th at exactly 7:12 a.m.
Planet Earth is a magnificent timepiece! The Earth rotates counterclockwise once every 24 hours. One complete rotation equals 360 degrees. The rate of the Earth’s rotation equals 15 degrees per hour:
360°/24 hr = 15°/hr or 15°/60 min, which reduces to 1°/4 min
Notice that the first five photos were taken approximately four (4) minutes apart; photo 6 of 6 was taken two (2) minutes after photo 5 of 6. Therefore, 18 minutes elapsed between the first and last photos. That means the Earth rotated 4.5 degrees during the photo shoot. Do the math:
18 min/1 x 1°/4 min = 4.5°
Now we know the Sun’s azimuth was 94.5 degrees when photo 6 of 6 was taken. No wonder it appears as though the Sun didn’t rise due east on the Equinox!