Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 1999/02/23
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]First, Here is a website that gives you a forecast for the week/weekend, and also a map showing where the aurora will be seen, as well as lots of other info about the N. Lights: http://www.pfrr.alaska.edu/~pfrr/AURORA/INDEX.HTM Go to Weekly Forecast, then also click on Auraural activity map, if you want that (Only covers Alaska,Yukon and NWT - which I believe are the best regions to see them). Now, to photograph the N. Lights. You need at least a camera that will allow manual exposures (up to 2-10 minutes). Probably a wide angle lens 9as fas as possible). Tripod. Shutter release. Film - 400 speed upwards is best (the new Fuji 100/1000 pushed works well, as does print film). Any slower, and the length of exposure leads to star streaks - unless you like that. Warm clothes - you may give out before the camera does. Often you can wait 2-3 hours for the lights to come out, if they do. Also, battery dependant cameras may die, as well as freeze up, sat on a tripod waiting. (horror of horrors, I know this is the LUG, but my F4 with lithium batteries has sat out on a tripod at -32c for 4 hours waiting for the lights and still worked okay). If you shoot the lights towards dawn or dusk, you will also get more blue in them, from the sky. A night with not quite a full moon works well, as it will illuminate the ground/foreground/horizon - trees, lakes etc, as well as show the lights. You also want to be as far away from any city as you can be. The light pollution will ruin your shots. Now, the following is a guide - the lights vary in intensity, sometimes they are static, sometimes very mobile. They also vary in colour. Indeed, sometimes the visible spectrum is different to what shows up on film (I hope these figures don't get scrambled): f# 200iso 400 800 1.4 5sec 3sec 2sec 1.8 7sec 4sec 3sec 2.0 20sec 10sec 5sec 2.8 40sec 20sec 10sec 3.5 60sec 30sec 15sec These figures are based on experience, not mathematical tables - they do work, but you really need to bracket. Shooting at 2.8 with 400 speed film, I will often shoot 15 sec, 20 sec and 40 sec or longer, depending how bright the lights seem based on previous experience. Hope this makes sense... Tim A