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Sunday, September 22, 2019

Unintentional Camera Movement Astrophotography

Most astrophotography relies on long-exposure images. Because the shutter stays open for several seconds—or even minutes—many things can happen during that time: the tripod can shift, the wind can blow, someone may touch the camera, or the lens focus or zoom can move. Sometimes the photographer doesn’t notice anything at the moment but later sees strange, unexpected results.

This idea fascinated me even back in middle school, when I first experimented with long exposures. My early photos often contained bright streaks or weird shapes. Some even looked like “UFOs” I never saw with my own eyes. Most likely they were reflections or car lights—but maybe not!

Today, there is a real creative technique called Intentional Camera Movement (ICM), where artists deliberately move the camera during long exposures to create surreal effects. But in this post I’m focusing on Unintentional Camera Movement (UCM)—the unpredictable accidents that sometimes create surprisingly cool images.

Below are two examples from my astrophotography trip to Salar de Uyuni, Bolivia, one of the most unique landscapes on Earth. Both images were created by accident, but each tells its own story.

Unintentional Camera Movement astrophotography from Salar de Uyuni, Bolivia — star trails stretching outward like warp-speed motion
Unintentional Camera Movement Astrophotography - Warp Speed

In this first example, the light streaks appear to shoot outward from a single point—almost like the camera jumped to warp speed during the exposure. My best guess is that I accidentally changed the zoom during the shot, creating a rapid zoom-out effect. Long exposures can exaggerate even tiny movements into dramatic patterns.


Unintentional camera motion creating streaks like a meteor shower in a long-exposure night sky photo from Salar de Uyuni
Unintentional Camera Movement Astrophotography - Meteor Shower

This second photo looks almost like a meteor shower, with bright streaks of light falling in parallel lines. In reality, it was probably a combination of tripod shift and slight rotation during the long exposure. Even small movements can create surprisingly artistic patterns in the sky.

While these images weren’t planned, that’s part of the fun of astrophotography. Sometimes the accidents are just as interesting as the perfectly tracked shots. Unexpected motion can transform a simple night sky photo into something surreal and otherworldly.

Related Astrophotography Posts

Tuesday, September 17, 2019

Bolivia Astrophotography - Salar de Uyuni at Night

It's something unreal. Photos were done during a Uyuni stargazing tour. Salar de Uyuni Bolivia Milky Way, Southern hemisphere sky, Crux constellation, red and green Airglow, elevation 3,650 m or 12,000 ft. Salar de Uyuni is the world's largest salt flat. Hexagonal formations on the surface is visible on photos. Such formation is a result of salt crystallization from evaporating water.

Canon EOS 60Da, 30 sec., Canon Lens EF16-35mm, f/2.8, ISO 6400, panorama of night sky.

Bolivia Astrophotography - Salar de Uyuni at Night

With 10,582 km^2, more than 10 billion tons of salt and containing up to 70% of the world’s lithium reserves, Salar de Uyuni is the world’s largest salt flat, a vast salt plain near the crest of the Andes in southwest Bolivia has amazing, fantastic night sky view!

Salar de Uyuni Milky Way Bolivia Astrophotography

Southern hemisphere night sky Milky  Way Bolivia Astrophotography

Wednesday, September 4, 2019

Zodiacal Light Bolivia Astrophotography

Zodiacal light - Bolivia Astrophotography - 2 hours after sunset (elevation: 4020 m / 13190 feet). Jupiter is on the top of the image. Photo was done near Hotel Jardines De Mallku Cueva, Bolivia. New Moon. Canon EOS 60Da, 25 sec., Canon Lens EF16-35mm, f/2.8, ISO 6400, panorama of 3 images. Digital cameras are more capable in collecting light, but even visually the Zodiacal light was clearly visible to the naked eye.

Zodiacal Light Bolivia Astrophotography

Zodiacal light is a faint, diffuse, and roughly triangular glow that is visible in the good dark night sky far from any light pollution and appears to extend from the Sun's direction and along the zodiac. The zodiacal light appears as a column, brighter at the horizon, tilted at the angle of the ecliptic. The light scattered from extremely small dust particles. The source of the dust probably originated from the tails of active comets.

There is color variation of the photo
Zodiacal Light Astrophotography

Black and White version of the Zodiacal Light - most close to what I saw.

Zodiacal Light Astrophotography Black and White