Stars and the Night Sky, South Pacific
Wednesday, September 29, 2010 at 11:44AM
Iain Williams in Astronomy, Kingdom of Tonga, Milky Way, Night Sky, Project - Humpback Whales, Kingdom of Tonga, South Pacific, Stars, Vava'u

Stars & Night Sky

One aspect of the south Pacific, and indeed much of Australia is the definite lack of light pollution.  The sky looks dark to the horizon...

LEFT:  Night sky, stars and Milky Way, Kingdom of Tonga

Much of the United States and Europe suffers from excess light pollution making the night sky and stars very difficult to see.  Another hurdle in the U.S. is trying to find a dark sky without aerial traffic!  I can remember when in Yosemite National Park (California) in the High Seirras photographing the night sky, it was a challenge to not phtoograph the contrail or red light of an aircraft flying overhead.  The airways in the US are so busy that it's almost impossible to watch the night sky for any length of time and not see the lights from a commerical or military flight.  This makes the south pacific an ideal location to photograph stars, star trails and other astronomic events.

Article originally appeared on Anaspides Photography - Iain D. Williams (https://www.anaspidesphotography-blog.com/).
See website for complete article licensing information.