I shot this picture in the eastern part of Morocco, near the Algerian border, during an astrophotography trip. The sky there was exceptionally pure, with absolutely no light pollution (Bortle 1).
This image was taken during the third night of the trip. We reached these remote mountains behind the Ouzina desert by 4×4, driving off-road through vast and isolated landscapes, and found the perfect place to set up camp at the base of a dune. The scenery was truly breathtaking.
There was nobody around, just the desert stretching endlessly around us. For a brief moment, a single headlight appeared in one of the distant mountains. Our guide told us it might be a drug trafficker crossing the border, or someone looking for dinosaur fossils, as the area is known for them.
The mountain is locally called Tajine because its shape resembles the lid of the traditional Moroccan tajine dish.
Cone nebula, Rosette Nebula, the Orion Nebula and Barnard’s Loop are visible in this pic.
The picture is a two-tile vertical panorama captured using a 50mm lens. I also used an H-alpha filter to reveal the red nebulae. Each tile of the sky is a stack of 26 images with an exposure of 45 seconds.
For the foreground, I stacked 5 images with a 60-second exposure.
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As a reminder, the sky looks very different to the naked eye than it does in long-exposure astrophotography. With unaided vision, you can easily recognize the shape of the Milky Way and notice a few of the brightest nebula regions as very faint, diffuse glows, but you cannot see the deep reds or the intricate structures shown here.
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The Bortle Scale is a nine-level system used to measure light pollution and the quality of the night sky at a given location. It ranges from Class 1, representing the darkest skies available on Earth, where the Milky Way appears highly detailed and the zodiacal light is visible, to Class 9, which corresponds to inner-city skies where only the brightest stars and planets can be seen.
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📷
Sigma Art 50mm
Canon 6D astromodded
Sky: 2 tiles – 25 x 45seconds – ISO 1600 – F/1.8
Foreground: 1 tile – 5 x 60 seconds – ISO 3200 – F/4
1 Comment
I shot this picture in the eastern part of Morocco, near the Algerian border, during an astrophotography trip. The sky there was exceptionally pure, with absolutely no light pollution (Bortle 1).
If you’re interested, you can find more of my work on [Instagram](https://www.instagram.com/tinmar_g/).
This image was taken during the third night of the trip. We reached these remote mountains behind the Ouzina desert by 4×4, driving off-road through vast and isolated landscapes, and found the perfect place to set up camp at the base of a dune. The scenery was truly breathtaking.
There was nobody around, just the desert stretching endlessly around us. For a brief moment, a single headlight appeared in one of the distant mountains. Our guide told us it might be a drug trafficker crossing the border, or someone looking for dinosaur fossils, as the area is known for them.
The mountain is locally called Tajine because its shape resembles the lid of the traditional Moroccan tajine dish.
Cone nebula, Rosette Nebula, the Orion Nebula and Barnard’s Loop are visible in this pic.
The picture is a two-tile vertical panorama captured using a 50mm lens. I also used an H-alpha filter to reveal the red nebulae. Each tile of the sky is a stack of 26 images with an exposure of 45 seconds.
For the foreground, I stacked 5 images with a 60-second exposure.
—-
As a reminder, the sky looks very different to the naked eye than it does in long-exposure astrophotography. With unaided vision, you can easily recognize the shape of the Milky Way and notice a few of the brightest nebula regions as very faint, diffuse glows, but you cannot see the deep reds or the intricate structures shown here.
—-
The Bortle Scale is a nine-level system used to measure light pollution and the quality of the night sky at a given location. It ranges from Class 1, representing the darkest skies available on Earth, where the Milky Way appears highly detailed and the zodiacal light is visible, to Class 9, which corresponds to inner-city skies where only the brightest stars and planets can be seen.
—-
📷
Sigma Art 50mm
Canon 6D astromodded
Sky: 2 tiles – 25 x 45seconds – ISO 1600 – F/1.8
Foreground: 1 tile – 5 x 60 seconds – ISO 3200 – F/4