| Calar Alto Sky: excellent not only in the vertical direction (photo release) |
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The second image was taken in the early hours of November 14th 2008 in a cloudless night, also under moonshine, but towards the opposite direction (East-South-East). Here the horizon is defined by the sea at a distance of about 170 km. One can clearly see features at the local coast at a distance of 65 km, moving ships on the sea (appearing as trails due to the long exposure time) and, above all, a giant thunderstorm cloud. Though it may appear to be close, this thunderstorm was actually located at the coast of Algeria, close to the city of Mostaganem, at a distance of 270 km from Calar Alto. The location of the cloud was evaluated using Meteosat weather satellite image data, and the distance independently confirmed by assuming a typical maximum height of 10 km for the top of the thunderstorm clouds. This means that the flashes extend below the local horizon and may well hit not the sea but, actually, the African continent.
The photographs were obtained by Felix Hormuth from the Max Planck Institute for Astronomy and currently a staff astronomer at Calar Alto with a Canon EOS 450D digital camera, using focal lengths of 60 mm for the thunderstorm and 100 mm for the image of Sierra Nevada, at a sensitivity of ISO 1600. Both images are stacks of 10 single exposures with 30 s exposure time each.
High resolution images:
Sierra Nevada photographed from Calar Alto Observatory.
Thunderstorm over the coast of Algeria photographed from Calar Alto Observatory. © Calar Alto Observatory, November 2008 This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it
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Calar Alto nights enjoy excellent 
