Nelson Mail

‘Spectacula­r’ meteor caught on camera

The meteor was captured by photograph­er Greg Price from his back garden in Richmond on Saturday night.

- Frances Chin

An amateur photograph­er has captured a meteor that streaked across the night sky above Nelson and left a lingering smoke trail.

On Saturday at 11.56pm, Richmond resident Greg Price set up his Nikon Z7 camera in his back garden to capture the annual Lyrid meteor shower through time-lapse photograph­y. After returning inside, Price went back to his camera after hearing a ‘‘faint bang’’ and his dog barking. Later, he found he had photograph­ed a shooting star.

The meteor had lit up his garden and left a thin trail of smoke in the sky, which took about two minutes to disperse. While he was disappoint­ed to have missed seeing the meteor in person, Price said he was thrilled to have it on camera.

The same night, Price captured other photos of meteors but none that created enough light to light up the ground or leave behind a smoke trail.

‘‘It was a hundred times brighter than all the other ones. It was spectacula­r.

‘‘I have seen other photos of meteors before but I have never seen one that left a smoke trail.’’

Price used Samyang 14mm F2.8 lens with a 10-second exposure time and an auto-ISO around 12800 to capture the meteor.

Time-lapse photograph­y involves taking one photo every 10 seconds. Long exposure is needed to get a good picture, with a high ISO to get the most of the available light.

The Lyrid meteor shower is caused by Earth travelling through a cloud of rocks and dust left over from Comet Thatcher. Comet Thatcher was last seen in 1861.

Price said the next significan­t meteor shower was the Eta Aquarids during the first week of May.

It was meant to be one of the best ones of the year to view from New Zealand, and was the result of rocks and dust left behind by Halley’s comet.

Currently, it was possible to see Saturn, Mars, Venus and Jupiter in a straight line about an hour before sunrise, Price said. The lineup happened only about once a decade on average, he said, and looked really impressive as the planets were much brighter than other stars.

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