Earth Trails

2020

DESCRIPTION

With this project my goal was to show earth's movement as a planet through space from everyday perspectives that non-astronauts can relate to and remind that we're all traveling together on this tumbling rock through the vacuum of space.

Essentially the machine is a camera that uses a laser, a motor and gears to be stationary in respect to fixed stars and can thereby see the rotation of our planet.

To achieve this a geared DC motor turns a worm screw with a toothed belt. The worm screw transmits its motion to a worm wheel, which turns around its axis once every 23 hours and 56 minutes. During this one or multiple cameras are attached to the metal worm wheel, taking photos.

In the middle of the wheel is a hole with a green laser inside. When properly adjusted the laser always points to the north star "Polaris".

Laser pointing at North Star

The DC motor is powered by an 18V battery, which is down-regulated to 5.8V with a PWM voltage control module. The cameras are powered by an external USB power bank which is also attached to the wheel. The shutter is controlled with a wired remote shutter release that fires every 30 seconds. The camera is in Aperture priority mode and depending on whether the earth is facing towards the sun or not the exposure time changes.

After recording a preferably cloud-, fog-, rain- and morning dew-less rotation and developing the RAW files I remove hot pixels with an action as a batch process in Photoshop. Then I import those new files as a sequence into After Effects and use two motion trackers on fixed stars to remove small variations in position and rotation. I export the frames as image sequence and video.

To create the Earth Trails as a video I use another batch process in Photoshop that adds with each step one of the stabilized images and blends them with the Lighten blend mode. In Media Encoder I then render this new sequence as a video. For the still Earth Trail images I use the Image Statistics script, where I import all photos and let Photoshop calculate the mean value for each pixel.

stacked 360° view

3D model of the machine:

Development

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