OK, one more eclipse shot | Bad Astronomy

Ive posted a lot of stuff about Sundays annular eclipse (see Related Links below), and I figured I was done but then I got a pretty remarkable picture sent to me.

During the eclipse, in northern California, two men sent a small (6 cubic meter) helium-filled balloon up to 90,000 feet (roughly 27 km). Equipped with a camera and an ingenious system that used puffs of gas to orient the payload, they took this pretty amazing shot of the eclipse:

[Click to penumbrenate.]

Thats the Earth on the left (duh), and on the upper right you can see the eclipsed Sun! They used a solar filter to cover half the cameras view so that they could get the correct exposure for both the Earth and the much brighter Sun.

I really enjoyed reading their story on how they set this up and executed it. I especially liked how they launched, sat around to watch the eclipse itself, then set off to find the balloon once it came back down (shredded after it popped at its lofty apex).

I love stuff like this! Basic equipment, clever people, and a can-do attitude results in something remarkable. Well done!

P.S. My friend and fellow Boulder astronomer Stuart Robbins posted a series of lovely timed sequences from the eclipse that he took in Albuquerque. Its well worth a click!

Related Posts:

- A fake and a real view of the solar eclipse FROM SPACE! - Gallery: When the Moon ate (most of) the Sun - The May 20, 2012 annular solar eclipse in motion - Followup: Supereclipse

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OK, one more eclipse shot | Bad Astronomy

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