X
-6
1.
Circus 4 year s ago
#8 The eye of God
       
4
2.
Faster 4 year s ago
No Circus. It's not the eye of God.
       
1
3.
Mushroom 4 year s ago
It is all entirely fake. All of it.
       
1
4.
Weird 4 year s ago
Can some1 explain how does the long exposure thing works when rotating and you have the sun/moon?
       
-13
5.
Limited 4 year s ago
Mushroom

Retard alert.
       
1
6.
Limited 4 year s ago
Limited
Mushroom is likely being facetious.
       
0
7.
Compilation 4 year s ago
I was wondering exactly the same thing "Weird".!HOWWW.!!!Is it possible for millions and trillions of stars and galaxies, to stay still?
       
2
8.
Devoted 4 year s ago
Reply to several: you have your telescope/camera on a polar mount, that is parallel to the rotation axis of the earth. Then a clockwork/motor drive that rotates the mount once every 24 hours. That way, you always point your telescoe in the same direction. This takes a high degree of precision.

You open the camera for a long-time exposure at nights, and shuts it before sun/moonrise. This way, you can accumulate exposure hours.

In short, friends: science.
       
27353641acute
belayclappingdance3dashdirol
drinksfoolgirl_craygirl_devilgirl_witch
goodgreenheartJC-LOLJC_doubledown
JC_OMG_signkisslaughingman_in_lmocking
mr47_04musicokroflsarcastic
sm_80tonguevishenka_33vomitwassat
yahooshoot

Each dot you see in this image isn’t a star. It’s an entire galaxy, each containing roughly a billion stars of their own.

X
Behold The Beauty Of Space! (15 pics + 1 gif)
>
16/16
<