Fual dump beside Jupter
Taken by Steve Hanley on March 12, 2015 @ i was just talking night photos when i notice in my photos the green thinking moving around jupter i was thinking what wrong with my camara or lens as i keep them clean i did not know what it was till now
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  Camera Used: Canon Canon EOS 5D Mark III
Exposure Time: 60/1
Aperture: f/2.8
ISO: 800
Date Taken: 2015:03:27 16:58:42
 
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i was just talking night photos when i notice in my photos the green thinking moving around jupter i was thinking what wrong with my camara or lens as i keep them clean i did not know what it was till now
Photographer's website:
http://stevephotographyire.com/
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Sorry, it seems to be an internal reflection on lens/filter due to the strong glare of Jupiter.
Posted by eirexas 2015-03-27 18:33:45
Sorry to say you are wrong sir please look at this link below
http://www.space.com/28840-glowing-rocket-fuel-cloud-photo.html

A mysterious cloud that glowed in the night sky above the Atlantic Ocean on the night of March 12 was actually a spray of unused rocket fuel, released following a launch from Cape Canaveral Air Force Station, Florida.

Keen-eyed skywatcher Scott Gauer sent us this photograph of the glowing fuel cloud — which appears as a small fan of light in the sky — from Danville, Pennsylvania. The fuel came from an Atlas V rocket launched by NASA and carrying four satellites that make up the Magnetospheric Multiscale mission, or MMS, a science experiment that will study energetic events in Earths magnetic field.

The rocket leaped off the launch pad at 10:44 p.m. EDT on March 12 (0244 GMT on March 13). Gauer took the photograph at around 1:18 a.m. EDT on March 13 (0518 GMT), about 2.5 hours after the launch, and said the fuel was visible with the naked eye for about 10 minutes. The fuel is apparently illuminated because it reflects sunlight.
Posted by stevephotos 2015-03-28 16:57:39
 
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