Very Old Photons

Very Old Photons

It was our last night on Kilimanjaro. Despite being completely exhausted from 18 hours of ascent and descent, I awakened early in the morning to photograph what is known to be one of the darkest skies on earth. I wandered around the moorlands until I had a good view of Kibo, the highest volcanic cone of Kilimanjaro, delightfully rewarded by the line of lights running up the ridge from climbers who were halfway on their way to the summit - which I was one myself less than 24 hours ago.

Unfortunately, there wasn't much photographic success. The Milky Way had set, and I couldn't focus the lens properly because my fingers were freezing. This is the photo I ended up with. By my calculations using Stellarium (and triangulating from the cropped parts of the photo) the orange elliptical spot on the top left is actually the Andromeda Galaxy

Can you fathom that? This is a picture of a million year old volcano, and those pixels of Andromeda are from 2.5 million year old photons from an entirely different galaxy*. If that doesn't put us in our place, what else will? 

*Alright, some of those pixels are sensor noise. 

Why Antarctica?

Why Antarctica?

Antarctica is mighty, mean and recklessly beautiful. It is a look into the past; and a look into ourselves in the present - as temporary as melt water, as oblivious as an iceberg pushed around by invisible winds, as helpless as a penguin lost in the open white. 

If one ever needs to step back and get some perspective, all the way down south is the place to go.


Photos