The sharpest 'real-life' moon picture is no less than the satellite

According to Andrew McCarthy, an astrophysicist living in California, starting from the waning moon, it took him two weeks to complete this outstanding work.

He cleverly took advantage of the moment when the Moon had the largest area of ​​light, combined with the mysterious beauty of the boundary of the two light - dark areas, helping the image to show each sharp line on the surface. The moon to its fullest, making them appear alive as if existing right in front of the viewer.

Picture 1 of The sharpest 'real-life' moon picture is no less than the satellite
Sharp moon to every detail.

McCarthy named the work 'All Terminator' , sharing that the photo was like a 'monster' in his project. He wrote on his Instagram account @cosmic_background: 'The moon like this looks a bit funny, also because it is an utopia. After 2 weeks of capturing images of the Moon since the waning moon, I chose the highest-contrast picture frame, right in front of the Moon's aurora where the darkness extends, aligns and blends them together to show diverse textures on the surface '.

Picture 2 of The sharpest 'real-life' moon picture is no less than the satellite
The photographer used the technique of collage and arrangement to create this work.

Picture 3 of The sharpest 'real-life' moon picture is no less than the satellite
Array light - subtle dark on the image.

'The process is tiring because the Moon is not aligned every day, so I have to map the image through a 3D sphere and adjust it to perfectly match each other,' he continued. McCarthy said he would be willing to create more similar works if received positive feedback.

  1. Unique photograph of Earth and Moon taken from Mars
  2. This is the first photograph of a dark area of ​​the Moon, much brighter than its name