Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Photography major - How do novices shoot the starry sky and the Milky Way?

How do novices shoot the starry sky and the Milky Way?

Question 1: How to find the location of the Milky Way when shooting the Milky Way in the starry sky? Nowadays, due to air pollution, especially the strong ground light at night, it is often not easy to find.

Go to the countryside to avoid light pollution, and when you look up, you will find a galaxy with dense stars in the north and south direction.

Question 2: How to take a clear and clean picture of the Milky Way starry sky? You've learned it. Ask me. You also took a picture of the Milky Way.

Question 3: When is the right time to shoot the starry sky with a SLR at night and want to shoot the Milky Way? Any suggestions about parameters? Ask the teacher for guidance, novice, thank you and praise it. 8 o'clock to 10 is the best.

Question 4: Great God, how to set up a SLR to shoot the Milky Way in the starry sky? The basic methods of shooting starry sky with data are: large aperture, high sense and slow door.

As for how big the aperture is, the bigger the better; How high is the high sense, 3200 or even higher, but make sure the noise is not too high and the shutter is slow, depending on the exposure instructions.

Question 5: How can I shoot a starry sky like the Milky Way? Just shoot the galaxy directly. You can't shoot the effect of the galaxy where you can't see it. Because the Milky Way is a celestial body in the universe, it can be seen in different regions in different seasons. And it should be in places where light pollution is based on urban principles.

Question 6: How to shoot a beautiful galaxy with a SLR? First, you have to have a very clean environment. The light pollution in the city is serious, and the air itself is turbid, so it is difficult to photograph the Milky Way. So you should go outdoors, try to stay away from the urban environment, and don't have too much messy light.

Secondly, the equipment, tripod is necessary, because shooting the starry sky and shooting the Milky Way is bound to take a long exposure, and you can't last for dozens of minutes ... shooting the Milky Way is not shooting the moon, you don't need telephoto, you need a wide angle.

I don't think it's right to ask for a large aperture upstairs, because it takes 20 minutes or 30 minutes to shoot the Milky Way, and such a long exposure time, plus a tripod, is helpful for ordinary night scenes, because to ensure the shutter speed, a large aperture can increase the amount of light in the safe shutter time, which is useful and can improve the purity. Therefore, for the fuselage, if funds permit, it will be much better to choose a full-frame camera, such as Canon's 6D.

Question 7: The starry sky is not easy to shoot. How can I shoot the Milky Way? Is the dog's head bad? Let me tell you completely:

To photograph the Milky Way, you must first have the Milky Way. The Milky Way exists every day. The so-called "Milky Way" means that you can see the Milky Way with your eyes, which is related to the weather. Clear night, cloudless sky, good visibility, away from cities and other places with serious light pollution. Then we need to know how to find the Milky Way. If the visibility is good and there is no light pollution, you can know where the Milky Way is with a little astronomical knowledge. If you don't know the basic location, the Milky Way is here, and you point your camera at the stars on the other side, it's not without such a thing. To find the Milky Way, we can find it through the summer triangle and the winter triangle, because that's where the Milky Way begins to extend. I won't go into details about this. I remind you that the Milky Way is also moving. Its position changes every season, and the rising time is different every day. You can learn more about the Milky Way by yourself. In addition, you can download Stellarium, which can be used to find these, both computer version and mobile phone version.

Next, talk about the equipment to be used: the fuselage should be highly sensitive, and the lens should have a large aperture, preferably a super wide-angle lens. Why? Because the lens with high sensitivity difference or small aperture will directly slow down the exposure time, then the stars will trail. The span of the Milky Way is quite large. If the lens is not wide, you have to connect several films. Then there must be a wired release (if there is no wired release, just take a countdown shot, which is not a big problem) and a tripod. Manual infinity focusing and manual exposure during shooting. The exposure depends on the broadcast, but it can't be too long. As mentioned above, it will be smeared if it takes too long. Shoot the galaxy, a machine with good sensitivity, 3200 without pressure.

This is some basic knowledge of shooting the Milky Way. It is not difficult to take pictures of the Milky Way, but it is not easy to have good weather. There must be a good place with no light pollution and good prospects. Otherwise, it is meaningless to photograph the stars in the sky.

Question 8: The starry sky is not easy to shoot. How do we photograph the Milky Way? Is it because the milky way is in the universe and the earth is in the milky way, so our sight is from the earth to other planets in the milky way and then to the universe? So the starry sky we see with the naked eye is both the universe and the Milky Way, and because the light emitted by other planets in the Milky Way covers any line of sight outside the universe, some large telescopes can observe other planets and nebulae in the universe through the Milky Way.

Question 9: Do any photographers know how to photograph the Milky Way and the starry sky? Most of these photos are slow-door time-lapse photography. If you shoot the orbit of a star, you need to use the B-gate length exposure. Generally, we use a wide-angle lens with a large aperture, a large sensor body and a tripod to shoot.

Question 10: How to photograph the Milky Way depends on your purpose. If it's just for fun, you don't need to use the equatorial plane without precision.

You can turn the aperture to the maximum, mainly the shutter time, and set it to 5 seconds. If you can't achieve the desired effect, increase it.

How much is appropriate depends on whether your telescope has a large focal length. From beginning to end anyway. The final synthesis will do.