
Matthew Dominick
@dominickmatthew • 70,457 subscribers
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Timelapse flying by Hurricane Milton about 2 hours ago. 1/6400 sec exposure, 14mm, ISO 500, 0.5 sec interval, 30fps
Matthew Dominick11,156,327 görüntüleme • 1 yıl önce

Timelapse of the moon setting into streams of red and green aurora followed by a sunrise lighting up Soyuz with a light blue. The aurora have been amazing the past few days. Great timing for trying out a new lens that recently arrived on Cygnus. 15mm, T1.8, 1/3s exposure, 1/2 s interval
Matthew Dominick995,281 görüntüleme • 1 yıl önce

This took a few takes to capture . . . Initially held onto the camera mounting bracket and pushed off (you can hear the bracket clinking). Then carefully let it go so the camera floats with you through space station. Flew from the aft end of the lab to the forward end of Node 2.
Matthew Dominick421,645 görüntüleme • 9 ay önce

Satellites dancing across the predawn green and orange horizon.
Matthew Dominick340,594 görüntüleme • 2 yıl önce

We are going home to Earth soon. I am excited to be with my family and friends again. But I am sure going to miss popping into the Cupola to take images of what Earth has to show us each day. Sharing some raw video/audio in an attempt to share a bit of what it is like to watch and take images of the Earth below.
Matthew Dominick276,991 görüntüleme • 1 yıl önce

Experimenting with time lapses out of different windows around the ISS. This is one of a few windows that face away from earth in a compartment in the service module called the ПхО. ISO is cranked high and the exposure is a possibly too long (1.6s) as you can see the stars starting to streak. Considering cranking ISO higher and dropping exposure for crisper stars but I don’t want to lose nebulosity. Thoughts? 1.6s exposure, f1.4, ISO 12800, 2s intervalometer.
Matthew Dominick217,412 görüntüleme • 1 yıl önce

The comet tail is noticeably longer each day. Pause the video at about 15 seconds . . . you can see the tail of the comet looks like it is bending. The atmosphere is more dense the closer you get to earth. Changes in the density of the atmosphere change the refractive index and thus make the comet tail appear bent. I was in my crew quarters reviewing the imagery when I first saw the bend in the comet’s tail. I did not see it real time when taking the images. I yelled out the door to Don Pettit to check it out but he was already off to take more images of the comet with an IR camera . . . look forward to those. Video is a timelapse played at 8 frames per second. Images were taken with a 1/8 sec exposure with about 5ms in between shots so this timelapse should be about the same speed as we see it out the window. Canadarm2 is in the near field, upper left, and out of focus. 200mm, 1/8s, ISO 5000
Matthew Dominick138,361 görüntüleme • 1 yıl önce

Timelapse traveling Northeast over Southeast Asia. In order of appearance: * So many lightning strikes * Colored lights from fishing boats - one of my favorite things to see at night from the ISS * Juxtaposition of city lights on the Korean Peninsula * Red lights North of mainland Japan. Does anyone know what they are?
Matthew Dominick100,714 görüntüleme • 1 yıl önce

Trying a different way to clean my retainer in space . . .
Matthew Dominick78,069 görüntüleme • 1 yıl önce
Daha fazla içerik yok.

