logo
Wicklow astro-photographer continues to reach for the stars

Wicklow astro-photographer continues to reach for the stars

The competition aims to find the best astro-photographs taken in Ireland over the past year.
Edna Kelly from Wicklow town has a longstanding history in the competition and has been shortlisted this year in the Out of This World planetary category for his entry titled Moon Opposition Season from October to April.
Each frame in this composite captures Mars on a different night, revealing how its apparent size, brightness, and surface detail evolved over time. The central image shows Mars at opposition in January 2025, when it was at its most striking. Arranged chronologically, the sequence also hints at the subtle arc of retrograde motion—a visual illusion caused by Earth overtaking Mars in its orbit, making the red planet appear to reverse direction in the sky before resuming its path.
In 2023, Enda was awarded the runner-up prize in the Out of This World category for his image When the planets align. Lunar occultation of Mars, which depicted the full moon as it concealed Mars from view by passing in front of it, and captured Mars just before it disappeared behind the moon from our perspective on earth.
Enda also had two of his images selected last year as part of the competition to feature in an outdoor exhibition organised by the Dublin Institute for Advanced Studies.
While a high-profile judging panel will select the overall winning entries, an online vote is open for members of the public to view the images and vote for their favourite in the Public Choice Award. Enda will be looking for plenty of Wicklow support and you can visit www.reachforthestars.ie/exhibition in order to cast your vote. Voting is open until 5pm on Thursday, July 24, and is restricted to one vote per person.
Alongside the Public Choice Award, the overall winners will be chosen by the judging panel which includes Professor Peter Gallagher, Head of Astrophysics at DIAS; Michael McCreary, president of the Irish Astronomical Society; Dr Lisa McNamee co-founder Space Medicine Ireland and Alan Betson, Irish Times photographer and multiple winner of the Press Photographer of the Year award.
The winning images selected by the judging panel and the Public Choice Award will be announced in August with an accompanying outdoor exhibition being held at DIAS HQ on Dublin's Burlington Road, for a limited time.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Wicklow astro-photographer continues to reach for the stars
Wicklow astro-photographer continues to reach for the stars

Irish Independent

timea day ago

  • Irish Independent

Wicklow astro-photographer continues to reach for the stars

The competition aims to find the best astro-photographs taken in Ireland over the past year. Edna Kelly from Wicklow town has a longstanding history in the competition and has been shortlisted this year in the Out of This World planetary category for his entry titled Moon Opposition Season from October to April. Each frame in this composite captures Mars on a different night, revealing how its apparent size, brightness, and surface detail evolved over time. The central image shows Mars at opposition in January 2025, when it was at its most striking. Arranged chronologically, the sequence also hints at the subtle arc of retrograde motion—a visual illusion caused by Earth overtaking Mars in its orbit, making the red planet appear to reverse direction in the sky before resuming its path. In 2023, Enda was awarded the runner-up prize in the Out of This World category for his image When the planets align. Lunar occultation of Mars, which depicted the full moon as it concealed Mars from view by passing in front of it, and captured Mars just before it disappeared behind the moon from our perspective on earth. Enda also had two of his images selected last year as part of the competition to feature in an outdoor exhibition organised by the Dublin Institute for Advanced Studies. While a high-profile judging panel will select the overall winning entries, an online vote is open for members of the public to view the images and vote for their favourite in the Public Choice Award. Enda will be looking for plenty of Wicklow support and you can visit in order to cast your vote. Voting is open until 5pm on Thursday, July 24, and is restricted to one vote per person. Alongside the Public Choice Award, the overall winners will be chosen by the judging panel which includes Professor Peter Gallagher, Head of Astrophysics at DIAS; Michael McCreary, president of the Irish Astronomical Society; Dr Lisa McNamee co-founder Space Medicine Ireland and Alan Betson, Irish Times photographer and multiple winner of the Press Photographer of the Year award. The winning images selected by the judging panel and the Public Choice Award will be announced in August with an accompanying outdoor exhibition being held at DIAS HQ on Dublin's Burlington Road, for a limited time.

Podcast Corner: Celtic Studies show delves into Ireland's fascinating history
Podcast Corner: Celtic Studies show delves into Ireland's fascinating history

Irish Examiner

time16-06-2025

  • Irish Examiner

Podcast Corner: Celtic Studies show delves into Ireland's fascinating history

There are various rabbit holes you could dive into on listening to the opening episode of the second season of Ní Hansae, the School of Celtic Studies Research podcast. While the episode title itself, What is the School of Celtic Studies?, isn't the most exciting, the hour-long chat with Professor Ruairí Ó hUiginn is fascinating and might leave you scrambling for your old college notebook to take down titbits. Halfway through, he tells host Dr Nina Cnockaert-Guillou about some of the school's colourful history, having been set up in the 1940s. 'TF O'Rahilly published the famous lecture on the two St Patricks, and for people who had been brought up on the legend of St Patrick and all that went with it were somewhat put out a bit by the fact there might have been two St Patrick's. It did attract public attention.' Cnockaert-Guillou is the researcher behind Ní Hansae. From Brittany, France, she arrived in University College Cork in 2017 and decided to study Old Irish having never done Irish before! She eventually completed a master's degree in UCC and a doctorate in Cambridge. She is now doing post-doc work in the Dublin Institute of Advanced Studies (DIAS), under which the School of Celtic Studies falls, focused on a 13-century text about Fionn Mac Cumhail. Ó hUiginn is working on something similar, and has been for a long time, he explains, working off a very old edition of an Irish text on the training of Cú Chulainn and the death of his son, Conlaoth. There have been a number of different versions and the story travelled widely. He says he's hoping to publish his work in the not too distant future. In more recent history, they talk of how DIAS was founded in 1940 by the then taoiseach Éamon de Valera, based on the Princeton School of Advanced Study. 'Initially it embodied two schools, the School of Theoretical Physics and the School of Celtic Studies, and it's said that this was established by de Valera to satisfy two of his own interests; he was a mathematician and had an interest in physics, and of course he had an interest in Irish and Celtic studies as well.' Every day is a school day! The first season of Ní Hansae ran in 2020-21, with multilingualism, 'Samhain and science', and bardic poetry among the topics discussed across the eight episodes. Coming up in the second season, episodes focus on Medieval Irish kings and the English invasion, early Medieval Irish philosophy, and storytelling and Irish manuscripts. There are so many great history - and Irish history - podcasts around. Ní Hansae, with its conversational aspect, is one you can put on and just sink into - without the pressure of cramming for an exam at the end.

‘Reach for the stars': Organisers of astrophotography competition want public to capture the magic of the heavens
‘Reach for the stars': Organisers of astrophotography competition want public to capture the magic of the heavens

Irish Times

time20-05-2025

  • Irish Times

‘Reach for the stars': Organisers of astrophotography competition want public to capture the magic of the heavens

Ireland's biggest astrophotography competition is now open for entries. This year, for the first time, under-18s can enter the smartphone category, 'Night Sky in your Hand', which is open for images taken only with a smartphone of an astronomical scene and without telescopes. Other categories are: 'Out of this World' – Planetary; 'Out of this World' – Deep Sky; 'Back on Earth' – Landscape; and 'Back on Earth' – Landmark. The Reach for the Stars photography competition is organised by the school of astronomy and astrophysics at the Dublin Institute for Advanced Studies (DIAS). READ MORE Entrants can submit up to two images, taken in Ireland between April 26th last year and June 2nd this year, per category. The deadline for entries is 5pm on June 4th. Shortlisted entrants will be announced in late June. The public are also invited to vote for their favourite to win the people's choice category. The judging panel is made up of: Alan Betson, The Irish Times; Michael McCreary, president, Irish Astronomical Society; Professor Peter Gallagher, senior professor and head of astronomy and astrophysics at DIAS; and Dr Lisa McNamee, co-founder, Space Medicine Ireland. The winning photographers in the 'Out of this World' and 'Back on Earth' categories will have their images published on the DIAS and The Irish Times websites and receive passes to three sites of the Astronomical Observatories of Ireland, a €500 voucher for photography equipment and a digital subscription to The Irish Times. The winner of the public choice category, as voted for by the public, and the winner of the 'Night Sky in your Hand' category will each get a voucher worth €250 for photography equipment and passes to the three sites of the Astronomical Observatories of Ireland. The winning and highly commended images will also be included in an exhibition at DIAS later this year. All shortlisted images will be included in an online exhibition, for the public vote, on the competition website. DIAS's Reach for the Stars competition is being run in partnership with The Irish Times and is sponsored by MKC Communications and The Astronomical Observatories of Ireland. The Irish Astronomical Society are initiative supporters. More information, including the competition guidelines and entry form, is available at

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store