Zooming in on JUPITER and SATURN in daylight! Nikon P1000. Planets visible during the day!
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- Опубліковано 29 лис 2021
- Planets visible during the day! Zooming in on Jupiter and Saturn in a daytime sky with Nikon Coolpix P1000 camera. Mega zoom test. No telescope, only camera with incredible optical zoom 125x + 4x digital zoom.
Poland, June 28, 2021, 4:50 am
#Jupiter
#Saturn
#Planets
#zoomtest
#nikonZoom
#p1000zoom
#nikonCoolpixP1000
#coolpixP1000
#nikonP1000
#p1000
#MrSuperMole
Music (UA-cam Audio Library):
Title: Large Smile Mood
Performer: Nico Staf - Наука та технологія
I also filmed Venus and Mars in the daylight :) Here are the links to these videos:
Mars: ua-cam.com/video/7khIpASY-Sw/v-deo.html
Venus 1: ua-cam.com/video/UFTfhxLsljA/v-deo.html
Venus 2: ua-cam.com/video/4v0TiCScLNY/v-deo.html
Lol юпитер россия
@@katastroff6011 7нроргг89гш77 в 6 и
Where can i get the sky watcher allview mount ?
Music name please
Hello there fellow friend. Did you find this planets on the sky in mainly the same area where you would find them during nighttime ? Was this filmed in the morning ? Thank you
This is absolutely astonishing!! I honestly didn't think you could see the planets in daytime. Superb.
When did u think u could see them at nighttime
@@cajunking3094 Er... yes, because they reflect sunlight. We see planets in the night sky all the time but most people mistake them for stars. Just like the OP I'd never seen or heard it was possible to see Jupiter clearly by day, and I've watched pretty much every respectable documentary series about the universe. I'm even not entirely convinced this video is real. Not saying it isn't. Just saying it's a lot to take in and I am sceptical of all things posted on the internet with good reason.
...and through cloud! I had no idea
@@ImagezAndWords Yeah indeed, another thing that baffled me and still makes me doubt if it's really real.
@@Kris_Aalst Jupiter's max apparent magnitude is about -3 which is like young and old Moon. It's no surprise for you to see the Moon in daylight isn't it? ;)
I had no idea you could see them this easily (yes you need a powerful camera, but still looks so easy). Saturn is crazy, makes you skip a heartbeat.
Hahahaha... Just love your profile 😅😅😅
You can apply special program to track down the objects
I've definitely skipped one, when I saw Saturn's rings. Just wow.
They seem no so far at all :)
@@hollow.mp4 Yes, just a stone throw away
I used my brothers $300 telescope to see Saturn from the backyard. I still remember vividly seeing it for the first time. It really is an emotional experience you cant explain. Im so glad that I was able to see it this way and not via a tour group or some high powered scope. The time it took to find it and manually track it, and how to actually see it (using your peripheral vision), then getting family members to experience the same was truly amazing. My brother bought it just to see the moon, as soon as I got my hands on it I had other ideas
What magnification was it
@@zurnna8642 2×
buying a telescope just to see the moon is fucking diabolical
I remember also my first view of Saturn. It is almost as if it isn't real when you see it...
@@Dutch_Prepper and then reality sinks in and you recognize your place in the universe and how tiny and insignificant you are
when gallilao sat there grinding the lenses of his telescope im sure he could never have envisioned anything like this being possible. even now i find it mind blowing. the sizes and distances involved alone should have brought unity to this planet.
Even more astounding is that Gallileo actually also saw Jupiter's moons in 1610. I have no idea how they could achieve this precision then.
@@Tethysmeerwell, they're a lot clearer through a telescope.
yeah, i don't get why people fight over tiny sections of a speck of dust. seems pretty silly to me.
Crazy those planets are out there right now, they seem like they'd only exist in a movie, but they are legit out there. So cool.
😀😀
lol
lol indeed, I suggest you watch fewer movies.
Lofl. Rotflmao. Hilarious.
lmfao lol yikes boomer lolololololol
My father told me that he could see the planets by day, he lived at 3600 meters above sea level in 1965 in the Peruvian highlands. The closest town with electricity was a 14-day walk away
It's not that hard bro even you can see the planets in my town . Even Venus is visible to the naked eye here
Now a days due to pollution and hazy atmosphere it's hard to spot them, but if you live at elevated places you can spot them but it's hard.
@@deadlytsg2792 Venus is very visible to most places, especially in the night where it shines the brightest sometime.
@@chrishandsome3388 he said meters
@Sabin Sesumariyan Destroyed in minutes 😂
You made it look very easy. Keep up the incredible work. Saturn is breathtaking as ever even in a not so sharp image.
I am truly amazed. It's surreal. You eee these planets all the time in animations or high res photos but to think you could just see them like this is a very unique experience. Specially Saturn. The feeling is ineffable. Thanks for making this video.
You can see Jupiters bands and Saturns rings! I’ve never seen anything like it and it was so clear, too. That’s amazing! Imagine how much you’d be able to see on a cloudless night, away from light pollution, it’d be breathtaking!
Then you see the ocean of stars, literally
@@smoklares9791 I have seen that and boy, it's horrifying AND beautiful 😲
Farwah Batool howd you see that
@@safwanstar4850 cloudless night, away from light pollution
@@safwanstar4850 there was one night when we had power break down across the whole country. That night, we saw that scene. It felt like the sky (hanging stars, glass shards) would fall down on us 😅
Reminds me a couple years back, was fiddling with friends cheap telescope, decided to look at the brightest star I could find, and it was Saturn, pretty overwhelming to actually see it in person
Saturn isn't a star
@@TheChrisglasgow pretty sure they know that. it just so happens that while they were looking for stars, they stumbled upon saturnn
@@TheChrisglasgow no shit sherlock
@@TheChrisglasgow You must be a hoot at dinner parties.
@@TheChrisglasgow @@@$ hole does it matter whatever it is. These are just empty words. Stars, planets, Pussycat, all these are just empty words. We don't know a shit about anything and we are fighting over empty words.
Truly amazing shots. I didn't believe you could see these two planets in day time. The Nikon P1000 has an amazing lens. This lens alone is worth more than the price of the camera. I like the way you cleaned those images. Job well done.
Amazing video. Thank you for capturing these two beautiful planets!
I have always wanted to see them in daylight. This is just fantastic. Thank you so much!
i haven't seen them at night-time yet :(
@@MarkWhichI do and it's amazing
“Saturn is not as bright as Jupiter.”
Saturn: “And I took that personally.”
Saturn: "It's not my fault that I need a little TIME, to show you my brightness..."
Not my fault I was born so bright.
HAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA what a original joke that I've never seen before, I've never laughed so much, oh my the humor on youtube is beyond great.
"Personally"? no, it should be "Planetally"
Right 👍
Thank you for producing this! Fascinating.
This was in my wishlist.Thank you so much!
It's amazing.... Even at the no processed image we can see Saturn's rings.... Thanks my friend.
"So how much zoom should this camera have?"
Nikon: "yes."
All of the Zooms.
The fact that here we are seeing these planets not as usual on a still photo from within space or even just illustrated, but live "in broad daylight" from earth.. I have the shivers. I don't know, but that.. it does something with me. Looking at the video of the camera filming the grass, then zooming in on the plain bue sky and suddenly floating in the sky come up those majestic planets, millions of kilometers away from any of us... I couldn't help but sitting in shock and awe, overwhelmed a little somehow. So many thoughts about our planet running through my mind.
Wow so you think the earth is flat!?
This is absolutely awesome. I've never seen planets in the daytime let alone through a telescope 🔭. Just being able to grasp this with my naked eye rather than some CG representation on some documentary. What I see in the twilight are just bright lights in the sky. I would be staring at this through your camera for like 30 minutes just to soak it all in
I bought a telescope this summer and can view the sky through my slanted windows on the top floor. I did not regret my decision for one second! There is no comparison to seeing these objects live with your own eyes. Even on successive nights I would watch the same planets and moon, even though they looked just the same as the day before.. 😅
@@joostdriesens3984 Last summer? :D
CG = Coingecko
@Miles Doyle You should repent for unsolicited proselytising.
And still some people believe that the Earth is Flat. If the Earth is Flat then the Planets are on their sides.
You did an amazing job.Reading the title, I thought you’re just going to show some blurry dots. But i could see Saturn's ring even without the post production colour correction. It's just amazing.
Thank you for this. Absolutely heart stopping.
Absolutely amazing! Superb work👏💯
This is brilliant. Thanks for showing us the possibilities of daylight planet watching/stargazing. I didn’t ever witness this before or even know this was possible!
All you need is a telescope like that one. They were invented 100's of years ago.
Ah, okay. If Nikon invented that 100 years ago, so what they have today?
Telescope itself is older than 100y. Where you write the line what is real telescope is interesting to know.. And that tube needs tricks of digital to get that superior.
Fantastic video! Never seen them in this perspective, really shows how close they are!!!! I love space
Except they aren’t close at all. Maybe relatively speaking.
You like empty places? "Only about 0.0000000000000000000042 percent of the universe contains any matter. The universe is a pretty empty place!"
uwielbiam twoje filmy. Dzięki nim zakochałem się w nikonie p1000
Thankyou for the video it really was magical and to realise just how vast everything is, it's amazing
There's something amazing about this....
We all KNOW the planets are there, we all have this intellectual knowledge.
But to see it come into view, as you zoom in, and to be honest i was surprised that Jupiter wasnt "that far away", in terms of zooming in, hanging there over our heads, right now, just barely out of vision..
It just somehow makes it more real. I dont know. This video was better than any hubble image.
Thank you.
Yes! Imagine if humanity could space travel between these plants with ease though, the value of appreciation of the knowing of these planets would fall drasticly, but atm, we cant, so seeing them is mind melting for us.
@@croissantlover1 We would start gazing at other things in the universe that are slightly out of reach. Until technology picks up again.
The other day I was watching the almost new moon with my telescope. Most of the moon is then very dark. Through the telescope it looked like a giant ball levitating in the sky, just bound to us by the laws of physics but nothing else. Astronomy can be unnerving at times. And all the movements and orbits aren't even that stable in our solar system, things will change. Just not at a timescale that is relevant for us :-)
@@croissantlover1 Never going to happen. I wish what I said wasn't true.
Good observation. Some of us don't think it's that far away either. It's just a light in the sky...not a body millions of light years away
I got chills when the bands of Jupiter and Saturn's rings came into focus. We have active worlds out there in our own neighborhood 🙌🏾
I'm happy humans can't reach this planets.
And you actually believe it’s a planet you can walk on that you see in the video? You really believe that camera zoomed in on an object supposed to be flying through space at a distance of 812 million km for Jupiter? I bet you, it’s not a planet and it’s not 821 million km away from us. It’s right there where you see it when you zoom in. Nothing crazy there. If you take this crazy camera and go to a lake big enough to have curvature (sounds stupid to all those who know hahah) and you zoom in on the distant shore that you can’t see with your naked eye, I promise you the shore will appear and reveal no curvature. And it shows that your “planets” just can’t be that far away if a camera can achieve these high levels of zoom and produce those pictures. What do you need big space telescopes for when you can just go into your backyard and zoom in on the stars at night!! That will reveal something much more amazing to you than being like “oh wow there I see this circle in the sky, better believe it’s a world where things are happening” like what?? It’s all happening down here. Open your eyes.
@@leonstreubel A shore and planet are so far apart it's not even something you can really compare. A telescope allows people to view further than what's in this video. MUCH. Further.
Stop dreaming those planets are waaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaay distant to be reachable within your lifespan. Space is empty and huge, like beyond our concept of the word big.
@@TheTruthF98 Why? Even if we could reach those two planets we could never go to the surface of them. The pressure would be too great, not to mention the radiation.
Cool! Thanks for sharing and Happy New Year!
my friend, your shots are amasing thank you so much
I remember going to an amateur observation of Mars on August 25th, 2003. It was at its closest point in 60 000 years @ 58 million miles. Being able to see its polar caps is something I will remember for the rest of my days.
@The Crazy Amateur Runner what you mean? He's saying it was the closest it has been to earth in 60,000 years. 58 million miles away.
Mars is closer than that, you probably meant kilometres
@@seanb9698 yep just checked it out. 2003 was closest at 55 million kilometres. Was the closest for 60,000 years. Won't be that close again until the year 2287.
@@seanb9698 my bad. Kilometres. I leave the mistake. I’ll own that.
Cheers.
@The Crazy Amateur Runner
Lol. So some arbitrary limit on distance then is your choice? What is the distance? What do you run into? Is there nothing making up whatever that thing is you run into? Just a magical wall?
There is a timeless reaction when first seeing Saturn.
Everyone remembers their first time seeing those rings with their own eyes and just being blown away.
I remember my first time too. Using a reflector telescope that I got for Christmas years ago. I remembered seeing what looked like a bright star but noticed that it was more oval shaped than round. Then I spotted the rings and was truly shocked
I don’t have any high-end telescopes, etc. so I haven’t seen Saturn yet but I will
Never forget the night I spent with my dad a few years ago.. It was at the time when Mars was very close to earth and you could see it with your eyes. We used my dads binoculars and I was blown away.
@@annika_27 doesn't need to be high end. My scope was £100 and I spent another £50 on some extra lenses and you can make it out enough to be impressed. First time I saw it was 4am having waited up all night for it to rise. Best moment ever
Sooo very beautiful,thanku for giving this opportunity to see them
Amazing, thanks for video. It always hit you differently when you are actually seeing the planets and moons just hanging there, it really shows you that they are actually there.
Very beautiful. Years ago I did the same with a friend who owned a telescope. Furthermore, the position of the planets and rings of Saturn makes evident the inclination of the Earth with respect to the plane of the Solar System.
LOL YEA IMAGING OF LIGHT DEFINITELY DICTATES YOUR NOT IN A DOME AT ALL EVEN THO YOUR PHYSICAL REALITY STATES YOUR TRAPPED IN A BUBBLE !!!!!!!!! BUBBLE BURSTERS !!!!!! WHO CANT ESCAPE BUBBLE REALITY !!!!!!!
Wouldn't that direction heavily depend on your latitude and the time of day?
@@nitrox5915 Yes, of course, that's all to consider and it's not that simple. However, seeing more than one planet in the sky helps to perceive the ecliptic line.
In high school we had an awesome physics teacher and he would invite us to his house and let us use his really expensive telescope , it was so much fun:)
The earth is a flat plane not the universe. That shits a joke, y'all laugh at the thought of a flat earth but gladly accept a flat universe? Lol y'all forget about the swirling balls of BS spinning around the sun in a vortex? Eric Dubay owns globe tards
Fantastic! Thx, keep on, man.
Wow idk why but to me seeing saturn like that is really cool while also giving me an unnerving feeling
Bro, you just changed the way I look in to the sky from now on. It’s classy to know that we can see them. Hats off man. My best video on UA-cam without any doubt.
You see them cos the earth is flat. The blue sky is still behind Saturn after maximum zoom. ))
@@user-pk2lc5rv3i _"You see them cos the earth is flat."_
You see them because they are there, and no, the Earth is not flat. Educate yourself.
_"The blue sky is still behind Saturn after maximum zoom"_
The "blue sky" is not behind Saturn, it's between us and Saturn.
@@Teeb2023 You are just brainwashed.
@@user-pk2lc5rv3i No, just learned and experienced in astronomy and astrophotography. Sorry if that doesn't jive with your UA-cam-fueled ignorance.
@@Teeb2023 there's no experience in globe model to prove the globe. While the flat earth model has lots of proofs
Fantastic stuff. I wish I could show my daughter this in real time but I can't afford the equipment, so I appreciate videos like this.
This camera isn't that costly at $900
@@YashTrivedispaceport6492 dude that's a fuck ton of money for a camera
@@YashTrivedispaceport6492 that's more than a whole week's pay for most people
@@drampz_ wow, imagine if it was more than a months pay.
@@MrOrangeonion I literally can not
WOWWWWW THAT WAS FASCINATING TO WATCH! GREAT WORK! 👍
Wow. Amazing. Thanks for sharing. I used to wonder if these can be seen in daytime, you have answered it.
I was just going OMG the whole video. That's astounding.
Both the camera technology and the fact you showed us these giant planets !
Thank you for this!
Yup and no matter how much proof there is of the universe ppl will still refuse to accpet that this is real.
This video is TOTALLY AWESOME! I never knew this was even possible. Thank you for sharing!
Thank you so much for this 🙏❤️
This is absolutely beautiful! I am amazed at how powerful telescopes can be. Thank you for sharing this 💖
It's only camera with ...3000mm Zoom.
But telescopes can actually do better
This isn't really a powerful telescope. I have telescopes that I keep in my apartment that are way more powerful than this camera. (And they are a lot cheaper, too).
@@beta_cygni1950 Can you name them? I’m actually looking forward to buy some.
@@KuwabaraTabo It depends on what you want to look at. Different scopes are best suited for different things. There is NO "one size fits all" option. That is why I own several types!
Planets & doubles? A longer focal length refractor on an equatorial mount will be great.
Larger open clusters? A shorter focal length scope (probably a reflector) capable of less magnification & larger field of view.
Fainter deep space objects? A large aperture reflector on a dobsonian mount is prob best.
Remember: Magnification is the LEAST important thing in a telescope!!! You will usually observe between 20x and 100x (at the most!). About the only times it makes a difference is when you're looking at planets like mars, Jupiter, and saturn.
Also... besides the optics, one of the most important things isn't the telescope's itself. Its the mount. An equatorial mount will allow you to track things at higher powers, but should be A LOT beefier than the scope you put on it (word to the wise: MOST of the cheaper EQ scopes you'll see... even from reputable companies... will undersell the mount that they will pair with their scope. Eventually, you'll want to upgrade. The EQ mount should cost more than the scope itself).
A dobsonian mount will be cheaper and lighter. But you wont get the tracking that you'll want for planets, etc. But will be great for larger scopes to watch DSOs at lower magnifications.
Thank you for sharing this moments with us. I love the music too. Very inspiring ❤
Years ago when I first got a telescope as a present, (quite a basic, beginners one) I was doing the usual thing and looking at the moon , and being impressed as you are.
I then saw a dim orange like "star" near to it and thought I would take a look. To this day I remember the shock, awe and then the absolute beauty of seeing Saturn. Completely accidental, I nearly burst into tears seeing it and making this discovery. Without doubt one of the most spectacular thing to see in nature
Its.. its beautiful.. thanks man, merry xmass to yall
What you and i are look at is no different even though we lived in a different places, thanks to you mr. and technologies. what time to be alive. Such a pleasure.
Wow! Jupiter looks really awesome through the blue sky. It's just lovely. Great job.
Wow! I never thought that this was possible. It really shows just how gigantic these planets are. The most astonishing thing I've seen in a while. Thank you for sharin :D
are you from the 90's
@@sinchanrai2024 He is from 1998.
Coolest video I've seen in years! The moon must look incredible with this camera!
Not only did you pick a killer track for background music, but you edited the video so the close-up of Jupiter appears just as the music swells and the vocals kick in, and the combined effect gave the moment real power.
The music for this video I have heard before on another video and it was of a little girl doing stretching exercises...she repeated the word GO and timed each stretch for 10 seconds.
Nie da się tego tylko raz obejrzeć, fascynujące 😍🤩
This is amazing! Thank you so much. I am going to show this to my 8 y.o. daughter, she will be delighted to see it. She is fascinated by the planets and the Universe. 😊
Thank you, everyone, please do not fight. There is place for everything in life. The science does not exlude the religion and vice versa.
That's truly amazing. You definitely earned a new sub
Thank you for this video, very good quality shot. 👍💪
Kocham oglądać planety, bardzo to jest satysfakcjonujące, miłe i tajemnicze kozacki filmik
Mam tak samo :)
@Mr SuperMole, It was already impressive when I clicked on the video knowing this was shot using only a camera and with no telescope, but my jaw literally dropped when I saw the rings of Saturn (and how clear it was) in the original video itself. Great stuff man. Thanks.
Oh My God. Awesome. Thanks for this video.
Honestly, so amazing and beautiful!
This was awesome. I'm really digging these astrophotography channels. You guys are doing some awesome work.
I know :D
imagine in 100 years we'll finally have camera's that can zoom into uranus.
It is called a colonoscopy.
@@daisaigaming6836 the future is now.
Thanks for sharing! Had no idea those white specks are actual planets. Living in the city really disconnects you from the stars let alone planets. Amazing!
That is insane camera, very cool pictures 😄👍
And to think they made telescopes way back when THAT powerful to see what the planets looked like. Incredible.
What? You can buy one now. The view to the human eye at the eyepiece is far superior to this.
@@RideAcrossTheRiver I meant way back when they first started making telescopes to see the stars, i.e. Galileo himself and... Aristotle? They made those things so accurate they could discern planet movement without the need to have special equipment. Just simple drawn pictures and patience on a monthly scale.
@@raineyoung3291 Galileo made his own telescope in 1609 based on Hans Lippershey's invention of the time. Galileo's telescope suffered chromatic aberration so badly it would not sell as a toy today. (Aristotle lived almost two thousand years before the telescope was invented.) You can see planets move relative to stars from night to night, and week to week or month to month, just with your eyes. Galileo did note the four bright moons of Jupiter as they orbit the planet, yes. My little 9-power aiming scope attached to my main telescope shows me what Galileo saw!
This video was made with a camera attached to a telescope and then the recorded images washed through computer software. I can attest that the view live and in real time at the eyepiece is (on a clear night) amazing more than any photo.
@@RideAcrossTheRiver The Greeks and Romans had simple telescopes. The Apostle Paul makes a reference to seeing objects far away through a glass darkly.
@@codetech5598 The term 'glass' meant a mirror in those times: looking-glass. The first telescopes were made with a pair of lenses ground and polished to precision shape. No such technology available to Greeks and Romans 1500 years before--and certainly not part of the anti-knowledge Christ cult.
I grew up sleeping outside in the summers and staring at the stars.... I swear Saturn was never anywhere near as close as it appears to be now. There was nothing shining even close to that bright at night!
That wasn’t Saturn. You need very powerful optics to even see Saturn on a clear night. It was likely Jupiter. Jupiter is the brightest object in the night sky after the Moon and Venus.
@@JasonB808 you can see Saturn with your bare eye though it looks like an usual star.
@@sebastianszalek6345 naked eye* 😁
@@markshaw270спасибо, может быть накэд
@@sebastianszalek6345 in Europe at least
It's a really hard challenge to observe space objects in the Daylight, But you actually did it, and it's beautiful, Good job
This is incredible!
Thank you, thank you, thank you, this was amazing to watch. I would love to do this but telescopes are so expensive and then so much time is needed to learn to use it and setup. Thank you for doing this, subscribed immediately to you channel, hope to see more interesting videos' from you
Thanks mate for this amazing video
That's so cool! I've been watching Jupiter and Saturn in the summer skies for the past few years and witnessed their alignment as a "Christmas star" last December but I've never seen them in detail like that, they're breath taking
I didn't even know you could do this. That is awesome.
This made my day
I love to see the planets
We get so little chances to actually see them
This cheers me up
That's amazing to have achieved it in the day time!
Super to jest wyzwanie dopiero sfilmować Jowisza i Saturna za dnia pozdrawiam :)
Astro statyw z systemem GoTo bardzo pomógł, ale i tak musiałem trochę korygować ręcznie :) Pozdrawiam.
Stellarium też pomoże za dnia namierzyć jeśli nie widać gołym okiem
Brilliant work mate
Wow😍This is so beautiful!
It is always a delirium to see your Incredible videos, 😍it is Spectacular to see Jupiter and Saturn like this in your daytime images 👌🔭🪐🌕
Thank you :)
@@MrSuperMole ☺️🇲🇽
I’m 32 years of age and it still blows my mind how big space is. We’re used to seeing the planets as cgi in documentaries. So to see the actual planets is really interesting. Thanks for this.
😐🥺🧐same age 😃
I consider myself seeing this in a real life.
Thank you for the video,life is amazing indeed
Satisfy video and it made silent smile on my face. Thank you
That may be one of the most astounding things I've ever seen. Thank you for this!
Класс! Шикарный фотоаппарат. Тоже хочу такой. )
Wonderful video of Jupiter n Saturn planets 👍👍
That was amazingly beautiful
Wow, never thought that was actually possible!? Thank you for teaching me a lesson! :)
Yes, telescopes can see the sky. Get out more.
This is literally how Galileo discovered Saturn, he took a telescope and pointed it at the sky.
Imagine being a creature standing on a rock that is 86 * 10²¹ times heavier than you and looking at the gas ball 1.5 billion kilometers away from you whose mass is 95 times greater than your planet's mass
It blows my mind
I dare you to do this to Mars.
ok :) ua-cam.com/video/7khIpASY-Sw/v-deo.html
@@MrSuperMole this man reacted quickly. You have my deepest respect.
Now do the sun. Let’s see the solar flares? Is that possible?
@@Iron1ankit no lol
reasonable for flying there)))
That's really nice. Thanks for sharing.
😱😱😲😲😲🤯Ja pierdziele!!!! Jowisza i Saturna za dnia chwycił😱 Szok! Filmik extra!👍👍👍
:)
Dobrze wierzyć w bajki 😳😂🤦♀️
This is an old trick, using a mead cassagrain reflector in the 1990s to show Jupiter and Saturn during the day using a station keeper to keep the telescope on track. That said 25-years later to be able to do the same with stacked images from a bridge camera is still relatively impressive.
wow. Very nice, great job!!!
That is so good. Thank you.
Simplesmente incrível esse vídeo! Quero mais como estes. Simplesmente maravilhoso
Nikon P1000: no one can beat me
James Webb space telescope: Think about it again
Nikon P1000: Take care. You haven't started yet
When did nikon say that???
😂😂
That is super cool. Good soundtrack too.
Excellent views, ty!! 🔭