Photographer Captures SpaceX Rocket Firing in Front of Full Moon

moon

Nicholas D’Alessandro captured this incredible photo of a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket launching in front of the full moon.

The amazing picture was captured last Saturday (October 8) at Cape Canaveral Space Force Station in Florida and is just one photo converted from RAW.

D’Alessandro tells PetaPixel that the photo was three days in the making after launches were scrubbed on the previous two days due to a helium leak. But, fortuitously this led to the best conditions for the photo.

“It happened to be the best day out of the three for the moon’s position, as it was increasingly full and lower on the horizon which each successive attempt,” explains, D’Alessandro.

“A fourth attempt would have been off the table as the moon rose after the launch at that point.”

Planning the Shot

D’Alessandro used a Canon R5 with a Sigma 150-600 lens and a 2x teleconverter to achieve a 1200mm optical zoom.

The photo captured the launch of SpaceX Intelsat’s Galaxy 33 (G-33) and Galaxy 34 (G-34) satellites and D’Alessandro used a specialist app to help him capture the epic shot.

“A rocket enthusiast and programmer named Declan Murphy made a breakthrough for rocket photographers in recent years by developing an app called Flight Club (a reference to the movie Fight Club) that overlays any upcoming launch trajectory with the features of the sky in predictive real time and even what your frame will look like based on the camera equipment info you enter,” he says.

“It isn’t laser perfect yet, but it’s accurate enough to make planning long exposure rocket path streak shots and celestial body shots suddenly far more accessible.”

RAW
The RAW shot

With the help of the app, D’Alessandro noticed before the launch that all the “ingredients were coming together.”

“The Moon would be increasingly full and rising lower on the horizon as the days got closer to launch. The weather was also beautifully clear for the next several days,” he explains.

“I checked the Flight Club software and sure enough there was a point in north Titusville where the shot could be achieved.”

His desired location was on a private condominiums pool desk so he had to secure permission before shooting from there.

“The condo allowed us to shoot from their property, The Moon was huge and low, the weather was clear, the rocket launched, and the Flight Club software was accurate. The rocket crossed the moon and the rest is history.”

More of D’Alessandro’s work can be found on his Twitter, Instagram, and Facebook.

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