Photography

Boundless beauty in the 2020 Astronomy Photographer of the Year awards

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Runner Up - People and Space. Observe the Heart of the Galaxy. Climbing the radio telescope at the Mingantu solar radio telescope array
Tian Li
Winner - Annie Maunder Prize for Image Innovation. Dark River. The artist printed out a massive image of the Milky Way and then created a three-dimensional sculpture out of the canvas
Julie F Hill
Winner - Aurorae. The Green Lady. Norway
Nicholas Roemmelt
Highly Commended - Aurorae. Iceland. Diamond Beach
Kristina Makeeva
Runner Up - Aurorae. Lone Tree under a Scandinavian Aurora.
Tom Archer
Winner - Best Newcomer. Waves. The image shows the central region of the California Nebula (NGC 1499)
Bence Toth
Astronomy Photographer of the Year. Overall Winner, and Winner - Galaxies. Andromeda Galaxy at Arm's Length
Nicolas Lefaudeux
Highly Commended - Galaxies. Attack on the Large Magellanic Cloud. Four lasers from one of the telescopes at Paranal Observatory pointing towards a globular cluster in the Large Magellanic Cloud. The lasers excite sodium atoms located in a layer about 80–90 km above the ground
Juan Carlos Munoz-Mateos
Runner Up - Galaxies. NGC 3628 with 300,000 Light Year Long Tail. The goal of this ambitious mosaic is to show the tidal tail, measuring 300,000 light years in length, with enough depth combined with a wide field of view to show it in its entirety
Mark Hanson
Winner - Our Moon. Tycho Crater Region with Colours. These colours come mainly from metallic oxides in small balls of glass and can give useful information about the Moon’s geology and history. The blue shows a high titanium oxide concentration and the red shows high iron oxide concentration
Alain Paillou
Runner Up - Our Moon. Partial Lunar Eclipse With Clouds. During the 2019 partial lunar eclipse, the photographer managed to capture this fantastic image of the Moon while a small cloud passed in front of it
Ethan Roberts
Highly Commended - Our Moon. Moon Base. This photo shows the Full Moon over the highest peak of the Krkonoše Mountains, Śnieżka
Daniel Koszela
Winner - Our Sun. Liquid Sunshine. Solar minimum may be seen as a quiet Sun and deemed dull in white light, but if you look closely at the small-scale structure, the surface is alive with motion
Alexandra Hart
Highly Commended - Our Sun. Ultraviolet. A portrait of the Sun captured through a specialized solar telescope that transmits light at the calcium K-line – a narrow slice of the spectrum in the near UV
Alan Friedman
Runner Up - Our Sun. 145 Seconds of Darkness. This image was captured during the total solar eclipse seen on 2 July 2019
Filip Ogorzelski
Winner - People and Space. The Prison of Technology. The star in the centre of the image is the Albireo double star, surrounded by the trails of moving satellites
Rafael Schmall
Highly Commended - People and Space. AZURE Vapor Tracers. The colours were created by the ‘Auroral Zone Upwelling Rocket Experiment (AZURE)’ from Andøya Space Centre which dispersed gas tracers to probe winds in Earth’s upper atmosphere
Yang Sutie
Runner Up - People and Space. Observe the Heart of the Galaxy. Climbing the radio telescope at the Mingantu solar radio telescope array
Tian Li
Runner Up - Planets, Comets and Asteroids. In the Outer Reaches. Uranus
Martin Lewis
Winner - Planets, Comets and Asteroids. Space Between Us... This image shows the really close alignment of the Moon and Jupiter that happened on 31 October 2019
Łukasz Sujka
Highly Commended - Planets, Comets, and Asteroids. The Ghost of Alnilam and a Near Earth Asteroid.
Robert Stephens
Winner - Skyscapes. Painting the Sky. Finnish Lapland
Thomas Kast
Highly Commended - Skyscapes. Voice of the Universe. An aerial radar tower on the edge of the city of Taiyuan
Weijian Chen
Runner Up - Skyscapes. Desert Magic. Wadi Rum, Jordan
Stefan Liebermann
Highly Commended - Stars and Nebulae. The Misty Elephant's Trunk. IC 1396, otherwise known as the Elephant’s Trunk
Min Xie
Winner - Stars and Nebulae. Cosmic Inferno. NGC 3576 is a well-known nebula in southern skies, but is shown here without any stars
Peter Ward
Astronomy Photographer of the Year. Runner Up - Stars and Nebulae. The Dolphin Jumping out of an Ocean of Gas. This target is officially known as Sh2-308, but the photographer has always enjoyed calling it the Dolphin Nebula.
Connor Matherne
Highly Commended - Young Competition. Light Bridge in the Sky.
Xiuquan Zhang - Age 12
Runner Up - Young Competition. Detached Prominences. This is the Sun imaged from London in September 2019
Thea Hutchinson. Age 13
Highly Commended - Young Competition. The Carina Region. This is an image of the Carina constellation, home to one of the biggest and brightest nebulae in the sky, the Eta Carina Nebula, seen in the top right
Logan Nicholson. Age 15
Winner - Young Competition. The Four Planets and the Moon.
Alice Fock Hang. Age 11
Highly Commended - Young Competition. Collision Course! An image of the Andromeda Galaxy (Messier 31) as well as two smaller galaxies (Messier 32 and Messier 110)
Winslow Barnwood. Age 15
View gallery - 31 images

In its 12th year, the world’s most spectacular astronomy photography contest continues to deliver stunning images. This selection of winning shots from the 2020 Insight Investment Astronomy Photographer of the Year span everything from a gorgeously impressionistic shot of colorful stratospheric clouds, to a surreal snap of a laser homing in on a distant globular cluster.

This year’s top prize went to Nicolas Lefaudeux for an unusual shot of the Andromeda Galaxy. Lefaudeux used a technique called tilt-shift photography to generate his unique portrait. He 3D-printed a novel object purposely designed to hold his camera at a specific angle to the telescope in order to capture this highly original perspective.

Astronomy Photographer of the Year. Overall Winner, and Winner - Galaxies. Andromeda Galaxy at Arm's Length
Nicolas Lefaudeux

The broad contest spans eight main categories covering everything from Galaxies and Aurorae, to Stars and Nebulae. There are also additional awards given to the Best Newcomer and Best Young Astrophotographer.

Not only focusing on deep space photography, the contest celebrates earthbound perspectives as well. Thomas Kast’s evocative shot of nacreous clouds took the top spot in the Skyscapes category, impressing the judges with its painterly qualities.

Winner - Skyscapes. Painting the Sky. Finnish Lapland
Thomas Kast

“Clouds are said to be the bane of astronomers, but they can also be the inspiration for a breathtaking astrophoto,” says Steve Marsh, one of the judges this year. “These rare, incredibly high nacreous clouds reflect color like oil does on water and this photographer has captured them perfectly.”

Astronomy Photographer of the Year. Runner Up - Stars and Nebulae. The Dolphin Jumping out of an Ocean of Gas. This target is officially known as Sh2-308, but the photographer has always enjoyed calling it the Dolphin Nebula.
Connor Matherne

Winner of the Planets, Comets and Asteroids category presented another mind-bending composition. Lukasz Sujka’s impeccably timed shot of a close alignment between the Moon and Jupiter was described by one of the judges as “phenomenal”.

Winner - Planets, Comets and Asteroids. Space Between Us... This image shows the really close alignment of the Moon and Jupiter that happened on 31 October 2019
Łukasz Sujka

“This small project is a big challenge that involves a lot of luck and good seeing conditions,” explains Sujka. “To capture this phenomenon in such a big scale was quite demanding in data acquisition as Jupiter and the Moon traveled across the sky quite fast. It happened in altitude only 9 degrees above the horizon. I wanted to show the huge emptiness and the size of space, which is why there is a lot of ‘nothing’ between the two major parts of the image.”

Take a look through our gallery at all of this year’s stunning celebrated entries.

Tickets are on sale now for the annual exhibition of entries, opening October 23 at the National Martime Museum in London, England.

View gallery - 31 images
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6 comments
Ray6969
Great article, Rich, thanks!
Expanded Viewpoint
WHAT?!?! Excuse me? A laser homing in on a globular cluster?? How does that work? Light travels at varying speeds, depending upon what medium it is going through, but it does have an upper limit to it. We use a unit of measurement called a light-year, the distance light will travel in a year, because stellar distances are so large! And, even coherent laser light scatters as it goes, so any reflection of it by the time it returned from any object even in our own solar system, would be very hard to detect. A laser beam shot at our Moon if starting out at .125" diameter on Earth, would expand to about 1/4 of a mile diameter by the time it got there, then the reflection will expand the same amount again on the return trip to the observer.

Randy
Bushpossum
Well it works like this, Randy:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lunar_Laser_Ranging_experiment
David V
Stunning photography. Absolutely stunning.
I've seen the Northern lights myself, dancing and swirling and every time I see photos like these, I just want to go back. Magic. And kudos to the younger entrants.
bwana4swahili
A nice selection of 'astrophotography' even though a few would be hard pressed to be such, in particular the winning image; simply an image with out-of-focus stars!
PowayMojo
I have a fear of heights but, if anything could get me to climb those steps, THAT view would be it.