Astrophotographer Giuseppe Petricca took the image from Sulmona, Abruzzo, Italy. The dots forming a curved figure-8 in the sky mark where the sun appeared every day at the same time in a pattern called an analemma. Credit: Giuseppe Petricca |
This strange figure of the sun creating a figure-eight shape in the sky is an awesome sight, but required a year of patience by a dedicated photographer to create.
Veteran astrophotographer Giuseppe Petricca took the image from Sulmona, Abruzzo, Italy using a Nikon Coolpix P90 Bridge. The dots forming a curved figure-eight pattern in the sky mark where the sun appeared every day at the same time. A composite causes the pattern called a solar analemma .
“If we take a picture day by day, always at the same hour, the sun is not in a fixed position, but it slowly climbs up and then down the curve,” Petricca wrote in an email. [See more amazing sun photos from space ]
Important: Never look directly at the sun through a telescope, binoculars or with the unaided eye without proper protection. Serious eye damage or blindness can occur. Astronomers and veteran skywatchers use special filters to safely observe and photograph the sun .
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The tilt of the Earth’s axis and its variation in speed when rotating around the sun causes the graceful figure-eight pattern. If the Earth had a circular orbit and its axis was at 0-degrees tilt the analemma would not exist, since the sun will be always in the same place in the sky at a determined hour of the day. If the orbit was circular, but the axis was tilted like our real one, the two lobes of the figure would be equal in dimensions. Instead, if the orbit was elliptical and the axis was not tilted, the analemma would be only a line that would go from east to west.
To see more amazing night sky photos submitted by Space.com readers, visit our astrophotography archive .
Editor’s note: If you have an amazing skywatching photo you’d like to share for a possible story or image gallery, please contact managing editor Tariq Malik at spacephotos@space.com.
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