Recognizing the Milky Way in a Light-Polluted Sky
Milky Way rising over Silver Lake near Brighton, Utah ~ © Royce Bair (click to enlarge). Reddish glow on the left is light pollution from Park City, and on the right is from Heber City. |
People from big cities throughout the world often write and tell me that they'd love to see and photograph the Milky Way, but it is too light-polluted in their region. For the most part, that's true. However, in almost any area of the world, you can still see the Milky Way if you're willing to drive a few miles and train your eyes to see the shape and features of our galaxy—viewed from the perspective of our planet.
The above photo was taken only 11 miles from the edge of Salt Lake City, and we are still in a 'orange' zone according to Dark Sky Finder's map of the area. Even after the Milky Way appeared at 11:00 PM, in the region that I had predicted, many still could not see it until I photographed it and showed it to them on my camera's LCD monitor:
Even this raw, unprocessed view is 4X brighter than the naked eye view, because of the light-gathering power of a 20-seconds time exposure, a fast lens, and a high ISO. |
More light-gathering: The top photo is a double-exposure of the middle image and this 3X exposure to increase the detail in the landscape and the reflection in the lake water:
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