The September 28 Lunar eclipse from Salford Observatory shot with a Canon 600D through an Equinox 80 ED apochromatic refractor on an iOptron ZEQ25. The time-lapse covers about 2 hours 50 minutes from the beginning to the maximum at 03:48 and is shown at 240x speed over realtime for the first few seconds, then at 120x. The beginning is at ISO 400 with 1/1000s exposures and the maximum phase uses ISO 1600 with 2s exposures. You can see the stars coming up as the moon darkens and longer exposures are used. The timelapse was smoothed-out using the InterFrame Avisynth script.
Given that it was a freezing night and my optics got covered with dew, that is about the best I could get ;)
Note that a "Supermoon" is when the moon is close to its perigee, so it appears larger, but the difference from average is not significant enough for most people to notice.
For more info on how this was assembled, take a look at my blog post: [ Ссылка ]
![](https://i.ytimg.com/vi/2HHz7CVMPx4/maxresdefault.jpg)