A bunch of F-16’s flying night-time missions at my local airfield, my camera on standby waiting for the next wave of jets, and a full moon with some clouds. What else can one do then than take a couple of shots at the moon? At first the result was not spectacular, okay the clouds came out nice but the moon is rather over-exposed:
![](https://vault.crouze.com/2012/MDX-121128-OC09432-x.jpg)
If you wonder what the vague orb in the bottom left is: that’s not a real object but lens flare from the moon. The small dot to the left of the moon, is that a planet? Let’s zoom in to full frame size…
![](https://vault.crouze.com/2012/MDX-121128-OC09432-x2.jpg)
Uhmmm…what are those tiny dots doing there? Well ladies and gentlemen, you’re looking at the planet Jupiter with its four largest moons. Not bad for a simple point-and-click shot!
Sometime later the clouds were gone for a while, resulting in a clearer view and a second shot:
![](https://vault.crouze.com/2012/MDX-121128-OC09433-x.jpg)
Some technical details for those interested: Nikon D7000, 70-200mm 2.8 VRII. First shot at ISO 4000, 1/80 at f3.5. Second shot at ISO 400, 1/30 at f4.
And then, the F-16’s came…
![](https://vault.crouze.com/2012/MDX-121128-AC18028-x.jpg)
Marco