t ECLIPSED SOLARGRAPH David Kazdan By placing photographically sensitive paper inside a soda can with a small hole in the side, the photographer captured this cyanotype of the April 8th total solar eclipse from Cleveland Heights, Ohio. On the left, the tapered gap in the blue line of the Sun records the entire sequence of the event. The gap in the path at top left is due to the Sun passing behind a light post. DETAILS: Soda-can pinhole camera and cyanotype paper. Total exposure: 13 hours. MORE THAN MEETS THE EYE Miguel Claro This high-dynamic-range composite reveals everything from the delicate streamers of the solar corona and the ghostly, earthshine-illuminated lunar features during the April 8th total solar eclipse. Several dozen stars are also visible, including the multiple star system ΞΆ (Zeta) Piscium to the lower left. DETAILS: Nikon D850 camera and 600-mm lens. Stack of 72 exposures ranging between 1 /125 Gallery showcases the finest astronomical images that our readers submit to us. Send your best shots to gallery@skyandtelescope.org. See skyandtelescope.org/aboutsky/guidelines. Visit skyandtelescope.org/gallery for more of our readers' astrophotos. sk yand te l escope .o r g * SEPTEMBER 2024 79 and 2 seconds at f/6.3, ISO 100.http://www.skyandtelescope.org/aboutsky/guidelines http://www.skyandtelescope.org/gallery http://skyandtelescope.org