Hold your horses cowboy! You are just leasing this beautiful source of light from me... Sorry, you are not the owner, you just got the privilege to use its life giving power for a short period of time. Not am ownership!
Surprisingly no vibration from the Earth that affects the camera... Are you using nitrogen powered suspension? Its very hard to believe that this video is a real one... The picture quality is beyond of amazing.
@@RideAcrossTheRiver Dude, I am not sure if it will surprise you, but there are a number of special devices and options for long zoom cameras/telescopes that help to compensate the vibration. Starting from a simple image stabilization that is incorporated into a digital camera software and getting to a nitrogen-powered camera's tripod suspension that helps to negotiate the ground vibration. For example, most of the laser microscopes that uses X100 and up magnification ARE mounted on these nitrogen pressure-powered suspension desks. I cannot tell you how smooth is the Earth rotations goes, I don't know. However, with a laser microscope set for X450 magnification it will "feel" a baby jumping at the ground level of the building while you are seating at that dark room with the laser microscope on the 3rd floor... I hope that you will agree that this mysteriously clear video of the Sun is done (or is supposed to be done) with a high X tele-zoom optics.
Nice catch!
Wow, There's so much activity now!
As a sun owner i can confirm, these are definitely sunspots...
which star do you own and how wuch did it cost? I'm looking to by one you see.
Hold your horses cowboy! You are just leasing this beautiful source of light from me... Sorry, you are not the owner, you just got the privilege to use its life giving power for a short period of time. Not am ownership!
@@Mfaotxt kepler 452, its a nice one, i love it
@@edlauren9434 owner of the sun will turn it off for such words buddy
There's a little black spot on the sun today
(That's my soul up there)
It's the same old thing as yesterday
(That's my soul up there)
will this affect fishing season
is there a cure for sun spots?
Sunspots, also known as solar zits, that erupt from super-heated plasma pustules.
Surprisingly no vibration from the Earth that affects the camera... Are you using nitrogen powered suspension? Its very hard to believe that this video is a real one... The picture quality is beyond of amazing.
Earth's rotation is perfectly smooth.
are u sure CGI is not the case here and that's a real pic of the sun?
@@RideAcrossTheRiver Dude, I am not sure if it will surprise you, but there are a number of special devices and options for long zoom cameras/telescopes that help to compensate the vibration. Starting from a simple image stabilization that is incorporated into a digital camera software and getting to a nitrogen-powered camera's tripod suspension that helps to negotiate the ground vibration. For example, most of the laser microscopes that uses X100 and up magnification ARE mounted on these nitrogen pressure-powered suspension desks. I cannot tell you how smooth is the Earth rotations goes, I don't know. However, with a laser microscope set for X450 magnification it will "feel" a baby jumping at the ground level of the building while you are seating at that dark room with the laser microscope on the 3rd floor... I hope that you will agree that this mysteriously clear video of the Sun is done (or is supposed to be done) with a high X tele-zoom optics.
@@edlauren9434 Earth's rotational motion does not have 'vibration' unless you mean its 26,000-year precession.
@@v4vendetta156 Reality is troublesome for you, eh?
earth dooms is real prediction 😢