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teoliver photography

Conservation & Outdoor Photography
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Five shooting stars and airglow shown above the Keweenaw Dark Sky Park while stargazing during the Perseid Meteor Shower.

Photographing the Perseid Meteor Shower from Michigan’s Keweenaw Dark Sky Park

Thomas Oliver August 13, 2023

The Perseid Meteor shower peaked Saturday night as the Earth passes through the dust left by the Swift-Tuttle comet. I think I saw more shooting stars, sitting out for the few hours that I did, than the total I have seen for the past decade.

The five shooting stars in this image are from a composite of three 15-second exposures (though the three meteorites on the right hand side were all from the same individual picture).

Also in this picture is an example of “airglow” a phenomenon similar to the Aurora but less intense. Airglow is caused by the steady stream of radiation from the sun and while it is not typically visible to the unaided eye, it shows up in long exposure photos.

Special thanks to the Keweenaw Mountain Lodge, the Keweenaw Dark Sky Park, and Chris Guibert for hosting and organizing a Perseid Meteor Shower Party. There were about 20 Dark Sky enthusiasts and other photographers taking in the meteorite show and hanging out under the stars. It was a lot of fun.

In Night Sky Tags Night Sky, Keweenaw Dark Sky Park, Keweenaw, Meteor Shower, Perseids, Keweenaw Mountain Lodge, Airglow, Summer, Stars, Shooting Star, Big Dipper, Light Pollution, Ursa Major, Michigan, Upper Michigan

A lone white pine near the shore of Lake Superior with the Northern Lights as its backdrop

Spirit Tree

Thomas Oliver February 27, 2023

Aurora borealis on a moonlit winter night along Lake Superior can provide some really interesting compositions. On moonless nights the sky can show bolder northern lights set in front of a jet black Universe. When the moon is out, as it was this evening, it can wash out those contrasts. The tradeoff, though, is that the moon lights up the landscape with the long exposures needed for Aurora photography and along with the textures and contours of the landscape, the snow sharply reflects the moonlight making it seem as though there are stars imbedded in the ground.

For this particular image, I was not the only person at the location. A young couple was sitting among a cluster of trees that I would have liked to have photographed. However, they were using flashlights inconsistently and did not shut of the LCD screens on their cameras. Both of those light sources would have been very distracting in any of the pictures I would have taken.

In any case, shortly after taking this photo, I glanced at the image on my camera and new it was a keeper. It wasn’t until I opened it up on my computer this morning, though that I saw how interestingly the northern lights mimic the form of the silhouetted white pine.

If you look closely you can make out most of Ursa Major (The Big Dipper) above and beyond the white pine.

In Night Sky Tags Aurora, Lake Superior, Stars, Big Dipper, Ursa Major, White Pine, Keweenaw, Keweenaw Dark Sky Park, Night Sky, Northern Lights, winter

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