rtphokie
Photo board moderator
- Joined
- Jan 9, 2006
- Messages
- 3,607
Liftoff was at 6:21am about an hour before sunrise just as the sun was starting to give a hint of pink on the horizon. Even 12 miles away at the Astronaut Hall of Fame, we could see the pad:
But as the time grew closer, it became clear that my tripod wasn't tall enough and i'd just need to go hand held. I guessed on the exposure and missed but oh well, they came out better than I though they would.
We also got the treat of an ISS pass a few minutes before the launch. It passed just below the moon:
Skies were clear and we were able to follow the shuttle through SRB separation:
and on through Main Engine Cutoff (sorry no photo, its way downrange at that point and I only had a 300mm lens and a 8MP camera, it would have been a couple of blurry pixels at that point).
What I hadn't expected was how beautiful the contrails left by the launch plum that time of morning. They changed color minute by minute as the sun rose.
A few minutes after launch, looking up the causeway over Indian River between Titusville and the KSC Visitors Complex.
About 20 minutes later looking out to the East
This was likely the last night launch for the shuttle program.
But as the time grew closer, it became clear that my tripod wasn't tall enough and i'd just need to go hand held. I guessed on the exposure and missed but oh well, they came out better than I though they would.
We also got the treat of an ISS pass a few minutes before the launch. It passed just below the moon:
Skies were clear and we were able to follow the shuttle through SRB separation:
and on through Main Engine Cutoff (sorry no photo, its way downrange at that point and I only had a 300mm lens and a 8MP camera, it would have been a couple of blurry pixels at that point).
What I hadn't expected was how beautiful the contrails left by the launch plum that time of morning. They changed color minute by minute as the sun rose.
A few minutes after launch, looking up the causeway over Indian River between Titusville and the KSC Visitors Complex.
About 20 minutes later looking out to the East
This was likely the last night launch for the shuttle program.