Questions about my stratosphere photos

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The discussion centers on the differences in sky appearance between two stratospheric photos taken at the same altitude of 28 km. One image shows a pitch-black sky, while the others fade to dark blue, raising questions about factors affecting this discrepancy. Participants suggest that the angle of view and lens characteristics, such as flare and coatings, could influence the perceived color of the sky. Additionally, the time of day and the position of the sun may affect how the atmosphere is viewed from the stratosphere. Ultimately, the conversation highlights the complexities of photography at high altitudes and the importance of comparing similar conditions.
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Hi all.

OK so these were shot with the same camera with same settings. Both are supposedly at 28 km altitude in the stratosphere. Why does in the first image (NOT MINE) the sky appear pitch black while on the rest it is slowly fades to dark blue?

Any chance when the sun is in the horizon (evening time) the sky doesn't fade to black as much when looking from the stratosphere? That's the only thing I can think which is different between the first image and the last two.
Or do you think my own payload didn't reach even >15 km altitude?

http://i.imgur.com/X4XHwoC.png
AUz66It.jpg

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more info about how these were shot: habhub.org
 
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lens flare from the sun being in the frame will lighten black areas, a similar effect to "light fogging" photographic film.

Also increasing the contrast can darken the sky ...
 

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B0b-A said:
lens flare from the sun being in the frame will lighten black areas
Thanks. But isn't there lens flare also in the first image where the sky is black?
 
my semi-educated assumption would be because you are fading down from the black of space to the blue of the atmosphere
Looking straight out at a high angle, the atmosphere ,what's left of it will be VERY thin.
But looking horizontally along the line of the curvature, you are looking through a much thicker layer of atmosphere and hence you can detect it easier Dave
 
avidemux said:
Thanks. But isn't there lens flare also in the first image where the sky is black?
There is flare on the right-hand-side of the Santa picture. Whether or not that flare extended across the entire frame would be dependent on the design [and cost] of the lens , (e.g. how many anti-reflective coatings the optics had).

I just occurred to me you may not be comparing like with like : If the Santa lens had a wider angle of view than your lens that could explain why more of the "sky" is black in the Santa picture. At the same altitude a wider angle-of-view sees further out into black space.
 
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We both used the same cameras with the same lens (GoPro Hero 3)
 
I still go with what I suggested rather than anything to do with lens flare as being the significant reason :smile:

Dave
 
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