Backstory: How to capture a rocket
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[May 02, 2019]
(Reuters) - “It’s a challenge to
describe that noise,” says Reuters senior photographer Mike Blake, after
witnessing his first rocket launch.
“It’s a sound of rippling energy. Reverberating, cracking. It’s
something that stays with you.”
Blake worked with Joe Skipper, a veteran of more than 200 launches, to
produce Reuters visual coverage of SpaceX out of Kennedy Space Center in
Florida in March.
Apart from the visual thrill of a launch, readers want to know as much
as possible about Elon Musk’s SpaceX, which resupplies the International
Space Station and ultimately aims to put people on other planets.
Providing images is key to capturing the drama of a launch and whether
it is successful, with hundreds of millions of dollars at stake.
See some recent Reuters space launch photographs and the story behind
them : https://tmsnrt.rs/2VDgump
The next launch of the SpaceX Falcon 9 is scheduled for Friday, May 3.
The day before a launch slated for coverage, Skipper will assemble three
or more freelance and staff photographers to set up 10 automatic cameras
and associated gear on the perimeter of the launchpad.
NASA, which has run the Kennedy Space Center from Apollo missions in the
late 1960s through the Space Shuttle era, takes photographers to a few
select spots nearby where they can set up remote cameras with a view of
the rocket, which is as tall as a 23-story building.
The cameras are housed in boxes to protect them from the elements as
they have to stand at the ready for eight hours or more, exposed to
potentially drastic temperature and weather changes.
Inside the boxes, small electric fans blow on the camera lenses to
prevent dew forming, which could result in blurry images. The Reuters
crew adjusts focus, exposure, tests the automatic triggers and secures
the tripods to the ground.
The cameras are connected to sound sensors and take shots automatically
when something loud occurs, like a rocket with 1.7 million pounds of
thrust launching nearby.
"Setting up cameras with triggers is not rocket science itself but
having them sit there for up to 24 hours and keeping moisture off them
and not having batteries fail is a little more complicated," says Blake.
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Spectators watch from Jetty Park as booster rocket engines approach
landing pads, after a SpaceX Falcon Heavy rocket, carrying the
Arabsat 6A communications satellite, lifted off from the Kennedy
Space Center in Cape Canaveral , Florida, U.S., April 11, 2019.
REUTERS/Joe Rimkus Jr./File Photo
The media area to observe launches is about 3 miles (4.8 km) away.
After setting up the remote cameras, photographers disperse to take
up positions to get longer-range images.
The top of NASA’s Vehicle Assembly Building gives a direct view of
the launchpad across the low-lying wetlands. Another photographer
will stand on top of the Reuters building in the media site.
The combination of close-up and long-range viewpoints is designed to
produce a variety of shots.
“We’re there close-up in case something happens,” says Skipper.
At the same time, it is important to capture the bigger picture. One
Reuters shot of the launch in March, used by media outlets
worldwide, showed the boosters returning to land from the vantage
point of a beach, as birds fly past and a crowd of people watch,
giving a wider perspective to the event.
“That’s the one we wanted to do,” says Skipper, who researched
locations from a previous launch and instructed one of his
photographers to take up his position on the beach. Another Reuters
shot from 2000 showed surfers watching the shuttle going up.
“That shows something a little different from what people think is
going on,” says Skipper.
(Reporting by Travis Hartman; Editing by Bill Rigby)
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