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==Explanation==
 
==Explanation==
This is the first comic in a [[:Category:ISS Solar Transit|two-comic series]], released during the same week on Monday and Friday. The next comic in the series is [[1830: ISS Solar Transit 2]].
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{{incomplete|Created by a BOT - Please change this comment when editing this page. Do NOT delete this tag too soon.}}
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[[Cueball]] is trying to take a photograph of the {{w|international space station}} moving in front of the sun ([https://www.nasa.gov/image-feature/international-space-station-transits-the-sun example]).
  
[[Cueball]] is trying to take a photograph of the {{w|International Space Station}} moving in front of the sun ([https://www.nasa.gov/image-feature/international-space-station-transits-the-sun example]). He has his camera with a long lens set up with a fixed setting to keep it still while he contemplates the best way to get the photographs he wants.
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A normal camera is not able to take a photograph of the sun due to the extreme brightness. This is why Cueball is using a {{w|Astronomical_filter|solar filter}}, which makes the sun look orange instead of yellow.
  
A normal camera is not able to take a photograph of the sun due to the extreme brightness. This is why Cueball is using a {{w|Astronomical_filter|solar filter}}, which makes the sun look orange instead of white, as shown in the second panel.
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Digital cameras need to determine the color temperature of a photograph to correctly display colors. This is done using the {{w|Color_balance|white balance}} setting.
  
Digital cameras need to determine the color temperature of a photograph to correctly display colors. This is done using the {{w|Color_balance|white balance}} setting. The joke here is that Cueball selects the "direct sunlight" option, as he feels it is the option that best suits his unusual situation of directly photographing the sun, even though the "direct sunlight" setting is intended to be used for photographing objects directly illuminated by the sun and not for the sun itself.
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The joke here is that Cueball selects the "direct sunlight" option, which is normally used for objects directly illuminated by the sun and not for the sun itself.
  
The light from an object illuminated by "direct sunlight" is, in fact, ''indirect'' sunlight when it reaches the camera sensor; so when photographing the sun itself, the camera receives sunlight that is even more direct than "direct".
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The use of a solar filter also influences the color temperature, so "custom" would probably be the correct option. A camera using the "custom" option usually requires you to focus on a white or gray object to determine the correct setting.
 
 
The use of a solar filter influences the color temperature, so "custom" would probably be the correct option here. A camera using the "custom" option usually requires you to focus on a white or gray object first to determine the correct setting. Most high-end cameras, like the {{w|Bridge camera|superzoom}} camera that is likely depicted here, are able to capture in {{w|raw image format}}, allowing the user to adjust the white balance afterwards in software.
 
 
 
The title text is pointing out that the sunlit side of the moon is also in direct sunlight, which is why we are able to see it, and so "direct sunlight" would actually be the correct setting in this case.
 
 
 
It is the second comic within a week where Cueball is using a camera, similar to the one he used in [[1719: Superzoom]]. The previous comic was [[1826: Birdwatching]], two comics before this one.
 
  
 
==Transcript==
 
==Transcript==
:[Cueball is kneeling in front of a small platform while operating a camera with a very long objective. The camera is angled sharply upward toward the sky as it is attached to a tripod standing on the platform. An off-panel voice calls out to him.]
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{{incomplete transcript|Do NOT delete this tag too soon.}}
:Off-panel voice: What's going on?
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:[Cueball knees in front of a box with a telescope standing on it.]
:Cueball: ISS solar transit. From this spot, the space station should briefly line up with the sun.  
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:Off-screen voice: What's going on?
:Cueball: I got a sun filter and I'm trying to take a picture of it crossing.
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:Cueball: ISS solar transit. From this spot, the space station should briefly line up with the sun.
 
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I got a sun filter and I'm trying to take a picture of it crossing.
:[Two half height panels above each others follow. The first shows an image of the very orange sun on a black background, as seen through the camera.]
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[Picture of a very orange sun on a black background.]
 
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Cueball: Perfect. Hmm, I should set the white balance.
:[The second of the two half height panels shows Cueball making further adjustments to the camera, as in the first panel.]
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[White balance menu]
:Cueball: Perfect. Hmm, I should set the white balance.
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- Incandescent
 
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- Fluorescent
:[Once gain there are two panels above each other. The top is black with white text and icons from the ''white balance'' menu. It has the following options shown after each of the icons as mentioned below in the square brackets:]
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- Direct sunlight
:[Shining light bulb]: Incandescent
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- Flash
:[Shining fluorescent lamp]: Fluorescent
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- Cloudy
:[Shining sun]: Direct sunlight
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- Shade
:[Lightning]: Flash
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- Custom
:[Cloud]: Cloudy
 
:[A house that cast a shade]: Shade
 
:[Two triangles with a circle between them]: Custom
 
  
:[In the panel below Cueball still operates the camera as before]
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[Selects Direct sunlight.]
 
 
:[A frame-less but full height panel follows where Cueball leans back from the camera with his hands on his thighs.]
 
 
 
:[The last two panels are again above each other. It is almost the same panels as before the frame-less panels, except that the direct sunlight option has been selected as shown with a blue selection band across that option.]
 
:Incandescent
 
:Fluorescent
 
:'''Direct sunlight'''
 
:Flash
 
:Cloudy
 
:Shade
 
:Custom
 
 
 
:[In the bottom panel Cueball again operates the camera.]
 
  
 
{{comic discussion}}
 
{{comic discussion}}
 
[[Category:ISS Solar Transit]]
 
[[Category:Comics sharing name|ISS Solar Transit 01]]
 
[[Category:Comics with color]]
 
[[Category:Comics featuring Cueball]]
 
[[Category:Astronomy]]
 
[[Category:Space]]
 

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