Moon Dog...& Stars...and Arch

Sunny Sra

Well-Known Member
After the sunset, shifted gears a bit and shot the 1/2 moon, moon dog and the stars for a while. The arch and foreground getting lit by the brightness of the moon.

Moon Dog:
A moon dog, moondog, or mock moon,[1] (scientific name paraselene,[1] plural paraselenae, meaning "beside the moon") is a relatively rare bright circular spot on a lunar halo caused by the refraction of moonlight by hexagonal-plate-shaped ice crystals in cirrus or cirrostratus clouds.[2]
Moon dogs appear as part of the 22° halo, roughly 10 Moon diameters outside the Moon.[3] They are exactly analogous to sun dogs, but are rarer because the Moon must be bright, about quarter moon or more, for the moon dogs to be observed. Moon dogs show little color to the unaided human eye because their light is not bright enough to activate the cone cells.

20-01-31-Boot-Arch-Alabama-Hills-7170.jpg
 

AlanLichty

Moderator
Sweet capture Sunny - you have positioned the arch well in the scene relative to the moon/moondog and it makes a really pleasing balance for my eyes. Glad you didn't over brighten the foreground - this looks just about right.
 

JimFox

Moderator
Staff member
This looks awesome Sunny! Great work here, and good job on working with those conditions that many would shy away from.
 

Sunny Sra

Well-Known Member
Sweet capture Sunny - you have positioned the arch well in the scene relative to the moon/moondog and it makes a really pleasing balance for my eyes. Glad you didn't over brighten the foreground - this looks just about right.
Alan,
Thank you. Thank you for the comprehensive feedback. :)
 
This is a really interesting image, Sunny and you have done a great job of explaining what is going on here. I also like that you can see Orion so well. Did you have to do anything to make it stand out?
 
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