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Summary:
On July 11, 2010, the new Moon passed directly in front of the
sun, producing a solar eclipse of rare beauty across the South
Pacific. The path of totality crossed the Cook islands, Easter
island, the waters off Tahiti, and southern parts of Argentina
and Chile. [full
story] [animated
eclipse maps]
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Photographer,
Location, Date |
Larger images |
Comments |
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Juan
Carlos Casado,
Ahu Akivi site, northwest of Easter Island, from Shelios 2010
expedition (www.shelios.com/sh2010)
Jul. 11, 2010 |
#1,
#2,
#3,
more |
Spectacular
eclipse!!! |
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Alan
Dyer,
Hikueru Atoll, French Polynesia
Jul. 11, 2010 |
#1,
#2, #3,
more |
A
group of about 40 international travellers, including 14
Canadians, were at the airport on Hikueru atoll in the Tuamotu
chain of atolls in French Polynesia. Unfortunately, cloud
moved in at the wrong time (just at second contact) and
obscured the Sun through totality. Had the eclipse occurred
5 minutes earlier we would have seen it. People further
down the island in the village did see the eclipsed Sun
in the clear -- the cloud was that low and local. The fish-eye
shot shows the entire sky (most of it clear and with stars
showing) at the moment of second contact diamond ring. |
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Blas
Servín,
Asunción, Paraguay
Jul. 11, 2010 |
#1,
#2, more |
El
Eclipse del domingo 11 de julio, visto como parcial desde
Asunción, Paraguay. |
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Alson
Wong,
Paul Gauguin, French Polynesia
Jul. 11, 2010 |
#1,
#2, #3,
#4, more |
Six
separate exposures from 1/500 to 1/15 second were digitally
combined to create the image of the corona. I used a Nikkor
300 mm f/4 lens with a Nikon D300 at ISO 200. The third
contaact and Baily's Bead images were 1/8000 second exposures.
The diamond ring exposure was 1/500 second. For the wide
angle image I used a Nikon D70 with a 18-200 mm f/3.5-5.6
lens working at 18 mm and f/3.5, with a 1/4 second exposure
at ISO 400. |
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Dennis
Mammana,
On board the Aranui 3 off the coast of Hikuero Tuamotu, French
Polynesia
Jul. 11, 2010 |
#1,
#2, #3,
more |
After
an accident that damaged my primary camera just 22 hours
before the eclipse, I was forced to learn a backup camera
and use it to shoot the eclipse. Canon Digital Rebel XTi,
18mm-270 Tamron lens at 18mm, 400 ISO, 1/6s at f/5. Diamond
ring shot at 1/40 at f/5. All were hand held... carefully!
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more
images: from
Cesare Guaita-Gruppo Astronomico Tradatese on Rapa Nui (Easter
island); from
Steve Harvey of Easter Island; from
Brad Templeton of Hao, French Polynesia
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