Best location for stars with naked eye

  • Thread starter Thread starter blarznik
  • Start date Start date
  • Tags Tags
    Eye Stars
AI Thread Summary
Locations with minimal light pollution, such as the outback of Australia and areas outside Shreveport, offer stunning views of the Milky Way, which can appear as a bright river of light with visible dust patches. While photographs may capture more stars than the naked eye can see, the subjective beauty of the Milky Way is best experienced in person at truly dark sites. Observers note that even slight light pollution can diminish the experience, emphasizing the need for darker areas to fully appreciate the night sky. The discussion also touches on the awe of auroras, with some participants sharing personal experiences and regrets about not seeing them since moving to different locations. Overall, dark sky locations are highly valued for their breathtaking celestial displays.
blarznik
Messages
18
Reaction score
0
These places seem great. Do places like these actually appear this way with the naked eye?
 

Attachments

  • stars.jpg
    stars.jpg
    80.1 KB · Views: 724
  • Aurora in Iceland.jpg
    Aurora in Iceland.jpg
    32 KB · Views: 743
Last edited:
Astronomy news on Phys.org
WOW, that Aurora is amazing. If I saw something like that, I'd think that I was on another planet, or perhaps in another universe.

I can't talk about the Aurora photo because I've never seen one before, but the Milky Way can definitely look as impressive as it does in the photo. The photo captures more stars than the human eye can see, but it doesn't capture the subjective splendour of the Milky Way. At a truly dark site, the Milky Way is a shining river of light, with obvious dark patches of dust. It's bright enough to cast soft shadows. When it's rising, it sometimes fools observers into thinking dawn arrived.
 
Yes. Even going 15-20 minutes outside of Shreveport I can actually see the milky way and the dark patches of dust clouds running through it. In the light pollution map that I have the area I go to is in the yellow to green area. It runs, from most light pollution to least, White, Red, Orange, Yellow, Green, Blue, Black. In the yellow-green where i go, I can EASILY see the glow from the city still, so I'm sure that a very very dark area would be amazing to go to.
 
Drakkith said:
Yes. Even going 15-20 minutes outside of Shreveport I can actually see the milky way and the dark patches of dust clouds running through it. In the light pollution map that I have the area I go to is in the yellow to green area. It runs, from most light pollution to least, White, Red, Orange, Yellow, Green, Blue, Black. In the yellow-green where i go, I can EASILY see the glow from the city still, so I'm sure that a very very dark area would be amazing to go to.


WOW Shreveport ... if its one in the lower USA ... dang been a while since I stormchased through that area :)

Dark skies ohhh yeah... the outback of Australia ! the skies are just stunning. Its an astronomer's dream. To coin an old phrase..." it feels like you just reach out and touch them"

Aurorae... love 'em unfortunately since moving to Australia 11 yrs ago I don't see them any more :(

From my old home in southern New Zealand, I saw and photo'ed many of them


a link to just a few pix I have on my www site...
http://www.sydneystormcity.com/aurora.htm

cheers
Dave
 
Neither of those pictures would be what you would see with the naked eye - both were taken with cameras and long (longer than what equals what your eye gets) exposure.
 
This thread is dedicated to the beauty and awesomeness of our Universe. If you feel like it, please share video clips and photos (or nice animations) of space and objects in space in this thread. Your posts, clips and photos may by all means include scientific information; that does not make it less beautiful to me (n.b. the posts must of course comply with the PF guidelines, i.e. regarding science, only mainstream science is allowed, fringe/pseudoscience is not allowed). n.b. I start this...
Today at about 4:30 am I saw the conjunction of Venus and Jupiter, where they were about the width of the full moon, or one half degree apart. Did anyone else see it? Edit: The moon is 2,200 miles in diameter and at a distance of 240,000 miles. Thereby it subtends an angle in radians of 2,200/240,000=.01 (approximately). With pi radians being 180 degrees, one radian is 57.3 degrees, so that .01 radians is about .50 degrees (angle subtended by the moon). (.57 to be more exact, but with...

Similar threads

Back
Top