Jon Lazar
Member
Jessy,
The milky way galaxy is a lot easier to see than you might think...it's the largest object in the sky. The picture on the right is a computer generated picture of the night sky from San Diego on 12 August. Not every star is in the program's database, but you can orient yourself by the groupings circled in yellow. The milky way is the cloudy streak of light that runs from top to bottom across the computer-generated picture.
The orange and violet areas in your photo are cultural lighting from nearby cities, but you can clearly make out light splotches in your photo from the milky way.
The milky way galaxy is a lot easier to see than you might think...it's the largest object in the sky. The picture on the right is a computer generated picture of the night sky from San Diego on 12 August. Not every star is in the program's database, but you can orient yourself by the groupings circled in yellow. The milky way is the cloudy streak of light that runs from top to bottom across the computer-generated picture.
The orange and violet areas in your photo are cultural lighting from nearby cities, but you can clearly make out light splotches in your photo from the milky way.