Mindbending Moonset: Atmospheric Refraction | International Space Station
Expedition 73 flight engineer and NASA astronaut Zena Cardman: "Wild mirage of moonset as viewed from the International Space Station. The distortion and colors are caused by atmospheric refraction and Rayleigh scattering (and I think the ripples are likely from some temperature inversions? I’ll let the Internet correct me . . . )."
"Getting this shot as I envisioned became my white whale for more than a week. The challenge was mostly timing—finding, focusing, and tracking with a long, handheld lens during the brief few minutes we can see the Moon each orbit, then leading and stabilizing the framing on a soft horizon too dark to see."
"We get sixteen moonsets every day, so I spent a lot of time with this obsession. What a relief to finally catch it. 400mm plus 1.4x and 2x converter, 1/50s, f/22, ISO 2000, luck, and stubbornness."
https://blogs.nasa.gov/spacestation/
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