Fortune Telling Collection - Zodiac Guide - I want to shoot a beautiful meteor with my camera. How to shoot?

I want to shoot a beautiful meteor with my camera. How to shoot?

This depends on your exposure time and the focal length of the lens you use to decide whether to use a telescope. If the exposure time is from a few seconds to dozens of seconds, there is no need to use a telescope, just a shelf. If it is a long exposure or telephoto shooting, you need to aim the telescope at the polar axis and then shoot with the electric heel. If it is a long exposure or a telephoto and small viewing angle, it will leave a trail on the picture because of the Sunday movement of the earth.

Iso setting can be 800 or 1600 according to the noise control ability of the camera, and it cannot be too high.

The exposure can be determined by adjusting the number of test explosions within about 30 seconds.

18- 105 has a relatively large viewing angle. Just aim directly at Gemini, release it with the shelf line or the remote control.

For the 70-200(2.8) lens, you need to use the equatorial telescope and use the lowest 70-end aperture for maximum shooting. After the 6th, you shouldn't see the moon. Put Jupiter in the upper right corner of the viewfinder (it is no problem to cover Gemini with a 70mm viewing angle) to shoot.

In this way, if the weather is fine, you will get a satisfactory result if you go into the dark and pat it several times repeatedly.

Set the camera to manual, and then focus manually.

After shooting, you can process the photos, because the brightness of the meteor is relatively low, and you need to adjust the color scale with ps to get better photos. Please check the internet yourself when the meteor is in its heyday and act immediately. Good luck! !

I caught two meteors in a 30-second exposure photo, but it was very dark.