This Year's AstroFest Winners Will Leave You FLOORED
We often forget how wondrous our planet and the surrounding skies really are, but the winning astrophotographs of the 2016 CWAS David Malin Awards are a stunning reminder. As part of the Central West Astronomical Society's (CWAS) annual AstroFest, a photo competition invited amateur photographers and astronomers around Australia to feature the most incredible night images we've ever seen. In eight categories, including deep sky and solar systems, photos that captured astronomy and the sky most beautifully were awarded.
Take a look at the winners ahead.
Deep Sky Category Winner — "Trumpler 14"
"This amazingly detailed image is of the southern sky's most interesting nebula around its most dynamic and unstable star, Eta Carina. The whole frame reveals excellent colour balance, beautifully controlled dynamic range and admirable fine structure, visible thoughout. Beautiful!"
Wide-Field Category Winner — "Smilin' Orion"
"This is a very challenging field to photograph, given its enormous extent and very wide dynamic range, with the very bright Orion nebula and the delicately structured faint arc of Barnard's Loop. These issues are beautifully handled here and the image is aesthetically well balanced and presented. A worthy winner."
Nightscapes Category Winner — "Stormy Stars"
"This dramatic image has evidently composed itself, beneath a night sky scattered with pin-point stars, and it emphasises the fleeting and unexpected colours and dramatic clouds of a passing thunderstorm. A remarkably beautiful night-time landscape."
Solar System Category Winner — "The Hidden Colours of the Moon"
"The Moon's dark surface has subtle colour variations that give its reflected light its slightly yellowish hue. In this excellent image these colours are deliberately exaggerated, revealing the varying composition of our satellite's surface."
Theme ("Light Pollution: The Bad and the Beautiful") Category Winner — "The Milky Way over Bonnie Doon"
"A very well structured image that includes the distinctive band of the distant Milky Way above the yellow glow of Melbourne, about 100 km away on the horizon. It combines the bad and the beautiful in a way that catches the eye and obliges the thoughtful observer to consider the scene, which was the intention of this category."