ISS overflight

Below is a picture I took yesterday. The International Space Station, with the docked Space Shuttle, north of Alymer. Here, the ISS travels into the Earth’s shadow. I found out about the perfect conditions after I left home, so I did not have a tripod. This was taken with the camera sitting on a camera bag, sitting on a big rock: 27-second bulb exposure, f/8, 17mm, ISO800.

International Space Station

Shooting at Night

This evening I attended a presentation of the documentary “Karsh Is History” at the Library and Archives building on Wellington. BTW, I hate that title, as it seems rather inappropriate for a deceased person. It was about an hour long.

Which worked out well for me, as I wanted to go outside to get a picture of the International Space Station fly-over, which occurred tonight between 8:31 and 8:36pm. I wanted to have an arc of the ISS light over a long exposure of the sky (i.e. like star trails). I learned the following valuable lessons.

  1. Choose a location ahead of time. I had to find a good location that was less than 16 minutes from the Archives building. I thought either the Alexandra Bridge near the National Gallery or perhaps somewhere along the Ottawa River Parkway. I choose to find a spot along the river. There really is only one spot with a parking lot (near Tunney’s Pasture), and it was open. But it was also not lit. It was very dark, and a little scary as there were other cars parked there and I could not see the owners in the dark. I ran out to the waterline with my camera and tripod, but the view of the sky was not very good. I found a cornfield in Barrhaven that would have a good view of the sky for the ISS flyover when I try this experiment again. The cornfield is naturally also dark.
  2. Be prepared. I didn’t have a flash light, so I was using my cell phone to provide some light in order to see what I was doing with the camera. I also think a true wide-angle lens would be better. My EF-S 17-55mm f/2.8 IS is equivalent to 27mm which is not wide enough.
  3. The weather is critical to capture the sky at night. It was slightly cloudy, especially to the southwest, which was where the ISS flyover would start. The forecast is cloudy or partly cloudy until next Thursday.
  4. Know your camera. It is very difficult to attempt to figure out how to set a bulb exposure by reading camera buttons with the light from a 12-year old cell phone. I should have known how to do that before I got out of my car to take the picture. It is buried under the Tv (shutter priority) button. I basically know all of the camera controls in daylight, but cannot do the same in the dark.
  5. Always have a second battery with you. The camera was almost out of battery power. My second battery was in the car, and not in my pocket where it would have been useful for me.

In the end, I did not get a good shot of the ISS. All I have is a white streak on a nearly black background with little context (the outline of a treetop). The ISS is bright to the human eye, but to the camera, it is moving too fast for the camera to get much exposure against the light glow from downtown.

Faint light trail of the ISS over Ottawa
Faint light trail of the ISS over Ottawa

But on my way back to my car, I saw this scene that I had to capture. I think it looks great. Very moody.

Evening
Evening

We Choose to go to the Moon

40 years and 6 minutes ago, the human race lifted off for the first mission to land men on the moon and return them safely to the earth. The live (tape delayed by exactly 40 years) audio feed is available at We Choose the Moon.

Have we lost the ability to wonder at the world and the possibilities? Is there anything as exciting anymore? I’m feeling a little depressed that I missed the original moon landings (I was 3 years old when the last mission completed); that so much could be accomplished by the team with so little [technology]. The International Space Station is amazing, but it has been in operation for 11 years now (and may be planned to be de-orbited in 2016, which is even more depressing). Are there any missions to push the human envelope, to push the human race forward, anymore?

In the Shadow of the Moon

I watched the documentary “In the Shadow of the Moon” last night. I have been fascinated by the Apollo program for a few years now. What an amazing achievement. Incredible to put those 12 men on the moon, so long ago. It almost brings me to tears that we (humanity) can achieve something so remarkable.

I was too young at the time – I was only 2.5 years old when man last walked on the moon – I don’t remember any of it. All that work, effort, skill and astounding results happened before my time. Today, I realize that I am only a few months younger than Neil Armstrong was when he went to the moon (38y 9m; Neil was 38y 11m during the first landing).

What a moment in time. As they said in the video, the astronauts were approached by people who didn’t say “American’s went to the moon”, they said “we (humanity) went to the moon.” For one shining moment, the world came together to celebrate what man is capable of doing.

Today, 35+ years later, the world is less united than any previous point. Ethnic, religious and economic differences between people have widened. We came through the Cold War without incinerating ourselves, and now seem bent on destroying ourselves through pollution and hatred because we cannot work together.

We were once here
We were once here

But no matter what happens now, nothing can take away those footsteps on the distant world. Our presence is there permanently, and nothing we do now (or fail to do) can ever take that away.