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Se dan a conocer ganadores del concurso Insight Investment Astronomy Photographer of the Year 2018
24 de Octubre de 2018
El Observatorio Real de Greenwich ha dado a conocer los resultados de este concurso fotográfico global de gran popularidad, que premia a las más bellas y espectaculares visiones del cosmos.
En una ceremonia realizada el 23 de octubre de 2018, en el Observatorio Real de Greenwich, Reino Unido, se anunciaron los nombres de los ganadores del concurso Insight Investment Astronomy Photographer of the Year de este año. Las fotografías premiadas podrán verse en una exposición retrospectiva que conmemora los diez primeros años del concurso, en la nueva Galería de Fotografías del Museo Marítimo Nacional, a partir del 24 de octubre de 2018. ESO se ha asociado al certamen aportando un juez, Oana Sandu, del Departamento de Educación y Difusión.
El ganador absoluto de este año resultó ser Brad Goldpaint de EE.UU., quien recibirá un premio de £10.000. Su espectacular imagen, titulada “Transport the Soul” fue captada desde Moab, EE.UU.
Brad describió la fotografía y sostuvo: “Cuando apareció la luna creciente, reveló el paisaje increíble e inmenso de las colinas, bajo nuestro punto de observación. (...) La galaxia Andrómeda, la luna creciente, la Vía Láctea y la posición del fotógrafo se conjugan, creando el retrato armonioso y cautivante de un astro-fotógrafo llevando a cabo su trabajo”.
Los ganadores de las diversas categorías son los siguientes:
-Vistas del cielo: Fotografías de paisajes, vistas urbanas que muestran el cielo nocturno o el crepúsculo, incluyendo la Vía Láctea, trazos de estrellas, lluvias de meteoritos, cometas, conjunciones, surgimiento de constelaciones, halos y nubes noctilucentes, junto a elementos del paisaje terrestre
- Ferenc Szémár (Hungría) por Circumpolar (Primer Premio)
- Chuanjin Su (China) con Eclipsed Moon Trail (Segundo Finalista)
- Ruslan Merzlyakov (Latvia) con Midnight Glow over Limfjord (Premio de Reconocimiento)
-Auroras: Fotografías que muestran las auroras boreales y australes
- Nicolas Lefaudeux (Francia) con su obra Speeding on the Aurora Lane (Primer Lugar)
- Matthew James Turner (Reino Unido) con su obra Castlerigg Stone Circle (Segundo Lugar)
- Mikkel Beiter (Dinamarca) con Aurorascape (Premio de Reconocimiento)
-Las personas y el espacio: Fotografías que muestran el cielo nocturno e incluyen personas o la influencia del ser humano
- Brad Goldpaint (EE.UU.) con Transport the Soul (Primer Premio y Ganador Absoluto)
- Andrew Whyte (Reino Unido) con Living Space (Segundo Premio)
- Marc McNeill (Reino Unido) con Me versus the Galaxy (Premio de Reconocimiento)
-Nuestro Sol: Imágenes solares, incluyendo eclipses y tránsitos solares
- Nicolas Lefaudeux (Francia) con Sun King, Little King, y God of War (Primer Premio)
- Stuart Green (Reino Unido) con Coloured Eruptive Prominence (Segundo Finalista)
- Haiyang Zong (China) con AR2673 (Premio de Reconocimiento)
-Nuestra Luna: Fotografías lunares, incluyendo eclipses lunares y ocultaciones de planetas
- Jordi Delpeix Borrell (España) con Inverted Colours of the Boundary between Mare Serenitatis and Mare Tranquillitatis (Primer Premio)
- Peter Ward (Australia) con Earth Shine (Segundo Lugar)
- László Francsics (Hungría) con From the Dark Side (Premio de Reconocimiento)
-Planetas, Cometas y Asteroides: Fotografías de objetos dentro de nuestro Sistema Solar, incluyendo planetas y sus satélites, cometas, asteroides y otro tipo de restos zodiacales
- Martin Lewis (Reino Unido) con The Grace of Venus (Primer Premio)
- Martin Lewis (Reino Unido) con Parade of the Planets (Segundo Lugar)
- Gerald Rhemann (Austria) con Comet C/2016 R2 Panstarrs the blue carbon monoxide comet (Premio de Reconocimiento)
-Estrellas y Nebulosas: Objetos del espacio profundo dentro de la Vía Láctea, incluyendo estrellas, cúmulos de estrellas, restos de supernovas, nebulosas y otros fenómenos intergalácticos
- Mario Cogo (Italia) con Corona Australis Dust Complex (Primer Lugar)
- Mario Cogo (Italia) con Rigel and the Witch Head Nebula (Segundo Finalista)
- Rolf Wahl Olsen (Dinamarca) con Thackeray’s Globules in Narrowband Colour (Premio de Reconocimiento)
-Galaxias: Objetos del espacio profundo más allá de la Vía Láctea, incluyendo galaxias, cúmulos de galaxias y asociaciones estelares
- Steven Mohr (Australia) NGC 3521 – Mysterious Galaxy (Primer Lugar)
- Raul Villaverde Fraile (España) con From Mirach (Segundo Finalista)
- Cesar Blanco (España) con Fireworks Galaxy NGC6939-SN 2017 EAW (Premio de Reconocimiento)
-Joven Astro-fotógrafo del Año: Fotografías captadas por concursantes menores de 16 años de edad
- Fabian Dalpiaz (Italia— 15 años) por Great Autumn Morning (Primer Premio)
- Logan Nicholson (Australia — 13 años) con The Eta Carinae Nebula (Segundo Finalista)
- Thea Hutchinson (Reino Unido — 11 años) con Inverted Sun (Premio de Reconocimiento)
- Davy van der Hoeven (Países Bajos— 10 años) con A Valley on the Moon (Premio de Reconocimiento)
- Casper Kentish (Reino Unido — 8 años) First Impressions (Premio de Reconocimiento)
-Premio Especial: Premio Sir Patrick Moore Prize a la Mejor Revelación
- Tianhong Li (China) con Galaxy Curtain Call Performance
-Premio Especial: Robotic Scope
- Damian Peach (Reino Unido) con Two Comets with the Pleiades
El premio Insight Astronomy Photographer of the Year es gestionado por el Observatorio Real de Greenwich, en asociación con Insight Investment y la revista BBC Sky at Night.
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Calum Turner
ESO Public Information Officer
Garching bei München, Germany
Tel: +49 89 3200 6670
Email: pio@eso.org
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