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2 posts total
Simeon Schmauß

Well what a night it was...
I didn't expect very much since Munich is quite far south, but what unfolded surpassed our wildest expectations!
It took me a while to edit these images, in total I took more than 2000, but that also means there are some timelapses waiting to be processed :)
#aurora

A nightscape image of a large satellite dish under with pinkish pillars of Aurora illu.inating the sky above it. The waning crescent of the moon is about to set at the horizon and its shadowed side is lit by earthshine.
A nightscape image of a large satellite dish with purple Aurora pillars above it. A bright green auroal glow lights up the horizon and some dim greenish lights are visible up high.
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nigel
@stim3on@fosstodon.org wish I'd got my camera out, but I am grateful for all the images here - these in particular are awesome 👌
gaijin

@stim3on@fosstodon.org Great shots! Could you really see these colours from your own eyes or are they due to the long exposure? Impressive.

Edwin G. :mapleleaf:

@stim3on I have seen them in Montréal, which is quite a bit south. It’s almost halfway between the North Pole and the equator.

It was an amazing show that nature is giving us.

Simeon Schmauß

The full landing sequence of #Chandrayaan3

I wrote a python script to undo the frame blending from the original video and then upscaled the images with AI.
The video is at 120x playback speed, in reality this took about 66 minutes.

Credit: #ISRO / Simeon Schmauß

Simeon Schmauß

My goal was to extract clean images so I can interpolate the whole video with AI to get a very smooth video like @TJ_Cooney@twitter.com did for the rover deployment sequence.

Unfortunately there is too much movement in the video so the interpolation didn't produce good results. If anyone wants to give this video another try I'm happy to provide the extracted frames.
twitter.com/TJ_Cooney/status/1

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