81 seconds animation
This animation showing 81 seconds long time interval illustrates that even during the total solar eclipse
it is possible to observe changes in the solar corona. It is possible to distinguish between structures which
belong to the moving CME and relatively stable coronal structures.
Click on the image or on the following reference to display the
higher resolution image version (4.3 MB, GIF format).
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Image | Tse_2020_400mm_dmwa-rot.gif |
Date | 14. 12. 2020 |
Time | 2nd contact 16:07:59 UT, 3rd contact 16:10:04 UT |
Place | Fortin Nogueira, Neuquen, Argentina |
Coordinate | S 39° 57.680', W 69° 59.576', Alt. 485 m |
Conditions | Clear sky for 85 s of totality otherwise thin clouds Solar altitude at mid-eclipse 72.4° above horizon |
Optics | Nikkor 80-400mm 1:4.5-5.6G ED VR (set to FL 400 mm, F5.6) |
Camera | Nikon Z6 |
Exposure | 1/640 s - 3 s, ISO 100 |
Processing | Composition of 55 eclipse images. Eclipse images were calibrated by means of dark frames and flat-fields, aligned by means of phase correlation, composed by means of LDIC 6.0 software, processed using Corona 6.0 in order to visualize coronal structures. Final processing was done using ACC 6.1 software. Image processing by Miloslav Druckmüller Images acquired by Andreas Möller |
Software | Astro D3F 2.0, PhaseCorr 7.0, LDIC 6.0, Corona 6.0, Sofo ACC 6.1 |
Orientation | This animation has exact solar North up orientation. |
Copyright | © 2020 Miloslav Druckmüller, Andreas Möller |
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Miloslav Druckmüller
Institute of Mathematics, Faculty of Mechanical Engineering
Brno University of Technology, Czech Republic
druckmuller@fme.vutbr.cz
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Page last update: 30.1.2021
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