Image Credit & Copyright: Nicholas Buer
Explanation: There is a road that connects the Northern to the
Southern Cross but you
have to be at the right place and time to see it. The road, as pictured above,
is actually the central band of our Milky Way Galaxy; the right place, in this
case, is dark Laguna
Cejar in Salar de
Atacama of Northern Chile;
and the right time was in early October, just after sunset. Many sky wonders
were captured then, including the bright Moon,
inside the Milky Way arch; Venus, just above the Moon; Saturn and Mercury, just
below the Moon; the Large and Small Magellanic Clouds satellite galaxies, on the
far left; red airglow near the horizon on the image
left; and the lights of small towns at several locations across the horizon. One might guess that
composing this
30-image panorama would have been a serene experience, but for that one
would have required earplugs to ignore the continued brays of wild donkeys.
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