ChasingCoral
Well-Known Member
- First Name
- Mark
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- Feb 3, 2020
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- Retired oceanographer
Every video or picture I’ve seen on the subject seems to say the same thing:These photos are amazing. Do you see the colors with the naked eye, or do they only show up in a long exposure photo?
My photos are brighter and more colorful than what I saw with my naked eye.These photos are amazing. Do you see the colors with the naked eye, or do they only show up in a long exposure photo?
Yeah you can see hints of the colors with your naked eyes, but a long exposure photograph really brings it out.My photos are brighter and more colorful than what I saw with my naked eye.
That said, I took pictures because what I was seeing in person was AMAZING! The colors were 100% visible and the formations were stunning, just not as bright as the pictures come out. There were a few times where the patterns started to move so quickly that it felt like we were moving. Where I was watching, the colors and patterns were visible from directly overhead all the way to the north, west, and east horizons. Picture a half of an open umbrella that extended to the horizon. We called the formation above us the "belly button" because it looked like everything emanated from there radially to the horizon.
It was without exaggeration the most incredible thing I have ever seen. It lasted about 2 hours. My entire family was really bummed that there was no encore on Saturday night after the space forecast had predicted a high likelihood that it would return. By the afternoon, the forecast kinda fizzled, and by the time it got dark, we were outside of the aurora zone.
Barring another freak CME event, I doubt I'll get to see anything like it again.