Astrophotography by Anthony Ayiomamitis

Solar Image Gallery - Scenic Phenomenon

Although the rising sun may seem to occur at approximately the same azimuth when observed from day to day, a longer term observational project will reveal this to be far from the truth. In fact, if we were to mentally note the azimuth of the rising sun around summer solstice in June and repeat this exercise around winter solstice in December, we will note that the sun has shifted by approximately 65° during the intervening six months!

This "moving target" involving the rising (or setting) sun is due to the elliptical nature of our planet's orbit around the sun which is responsible for the variable arrival of the sun on the local meridian by up to 16 minutes early or late and the "Equation of Time" which is described and documented elsewhere on this site along with the variable altitude due to earth's tilt in its axis of rotation (23.45°) relative to its orbital plane.

Note: For a wider presentation of the image below, click here.


Image Details
Sunrise by Season
Imaging Details
Body:
Sun

Mass:
332,900 x Earth

Mean Eq Diameter:
109.1 x Earth

Distance:
147 million km

RA / Dec:
18h 46m 06s / -23° 01'

Diameter:
32.53'

Magnitude:
-26.8

Rising Sun Azimuths:
Sep 22, 2004:  091.23 °
Dec 21, 2004:  126.34 °
Jun 21, 2005:  059.83 °

Date:
Sep 22, 2004 - 07:26:38 UT+3
Dec 21, 2004 - 08:19:52 UT+2
Jun 21, 2005 - 06:08:28 UT+3

Location:
Athens, Greece

Equipment:
Canon EOS 300d
Canon EOS-F 18-55 mm
    @ 28 mm


Exposure(s):
1/400 - 1/1000 sec
ISO 1600
Auto Mode (EC)


Software:
Photoshop CS2

Processing:
Resampling
Stitching & Cropping
JPG Compression