To take a picture of the Milky Way, you will need a camera with manual settings, a sturdy tripod, and a remote shutter release. Find a dark location away from city lights, set your camera to manual mode, use a wide aperture, high ISO, and a long exposure time. Point your camera towards the Milky Way, focus on infinity, and take the shot. Experiment with different settings to capture the best image.
To take stunning Milky Way pictures, you will need a camera with manual settings, a sturdy tripod, and a remote shutter release. Find a location with minimal light pollution, set your camera to a high ISO, wide aperture, and long exposure time. Experiment with different settings and compositions to capture the beauty of the Milky Way.
To take photos of the Milky Way effectively, use a DSLR camera with manual settings, a sturdy tripod, and a remote shutter release. Find a dark location away from city lights, set your camera to a high ISO, wide aperture, and long exposure time. Experiment with different settings to capture the Milky Way's beauty.
The moon is a natural satellite of Earth and is not directly related to the Milky Way galaxy. The Milky Way is the galaxy that contains our solar system, including Earth and the moon. The moon orbits Earth, not the Milky Way.
To take pictures of the Milky Way effectively, use a DSLR camera with manual settings, a wide-angle lens, and a sturdy tripod. Find a dark location away from city lights, set your camera to a high ISO, wide aperture, and long exposure time. Experiment with different settings to capture the Milky Way's details and use a remote shutter release to minimize camera shake.
Yes, it is difficult to see the Milky Way with a full moon present in the sky because the moon's brightness can wash out the fainter stars and the Milky Way's glow.
No. We can't take a picture of the whole Milky Way from inside the middle of it. We would need to somehow get a camera outside of the galaxy to take that picture.
it is the milky way stupid
We are in the Milky Way galaxy.
You can't. You can find drawings, but for obvious reasons there are no pictures of the Milky Way from outside. As it turns out, if you were far enough away to get a significant portion of the Milky Way in the picture, you wouldn't be able to see the Sun anyway.
No - you are already IN the Milky Way Galaxy
If you could go out in space far enough where the light produced from the birth of the milky was has reached and have a device that could pick up the remains of the light and decipher it, then you could. But there is currently nothing that could go out in space that far or take a picture that well to do so.
Go to http://apod.nasa.gov/apod/ap071020.html
the earth is part of the milky way galaxy if that was your question.
No. The Milky Way is our galaxy, and our Sun is part of the Milky Way. The Milky Way got its name because it LOOKS like somebody spilled several gallons of milk across the sky. The Milky Way is a spiral-shaped "blob" of many billions of stars; there's nothing to "line up" with. See the link below for a photo of the Milky Way from NASA's "Picture of the Day" archive.
It takes our Solar System about 240 million years to orbit the Milky Way. Other stars - either closer or farther from the center of the Milky Way - will take less time, or more time.
Technically, you cannot take a picture of our own galaxy from outside, as the camera would have to travel tens of thousands of light-years out of the galaxy to do so. However, if you're on Earth, you see a large stream of countless stars in the night sky. That is part of the milky way galaxy. The "pictures" you see in the newspapers are just artists' impressions of how the Milky Way would look, not the actually appearance.
Try this link to the Astronomy Picture of the Day Archive from NASA.