Stay up to date with notifications from The Independent

Notifications can be managed in browser preferences.

Astronomy Photographer of the Year 2014

Otherwise known as 'the best damn photos of space you'll see till 2015'

James Vincent
Friday 19 September 2014 00:14 BST
Comments
Poised on the brink of space, this astonishing shot shows the curvature of the Earth with the towering Rocky Mountains reduced to tiny wrinkles on the surface below. Taken with the aid of a high altitude balloon, launched from Boulder, Colorado, the photograph captures the breath-taking view of the Earth from 87,000 feet about its surface. The tiny dot of the Moon pictured in the distance emphasizes the vast expanse between our planet and its nearest cosmic neighbour.
Poised on the brink of space, this astonishing shot shows the curvature of the Earth with the towering Rocky Mountains reduced to tiny wrinkles on the surface below. Taken with the aid of a high altitude balloon, launched from Boulder, Colorado, the photograph captures the breath-taking view of the Earth from 87,000 feet about its surface. The tiny dot of the Moon pictured in the distance emphasizes the vast expanse between our planet and its nearest cosmic neighbour. (PATRICK CULLIS)

From the impossibly-distant chaos of star-forming hydrogen clouds to a hybrid solar eclipse hanging just above the Kenyan savannah, the winners of the Astronomy Photographer of the Year competition capture the wonders of the Universe from (relatively) near and (relativistically) far away.

The winning shot by British photographer James Woodend shows the Northern Lights reflected in Jökulsarlon lagoon in Iceland; a double-curve of lime green caused by electrically charged particles from the Sun streaking through the atmosphere.

Other shots show Earth from the brink of space ('Moon Balloon' by Patrick Cullis, taken 87,000 feet above the ground) and the firey furred-looking surface of the Sun, twisting under magnetic forces (the winner in the Solar System category by Alexandra Hart).

Chris Bramley, a judge for the competition and editor of the BBC Sky at Night Magazine, said: “This year two things stood out for me while judging: the record-breaking number of 2,500 entries from a truly global community of astrophotographers, and the staggering quality of the images – it was regularly hard to believe that many were taken from the surface of the Earth and not a space telescope orbiting our planet.”

Click through the gallery below to see more of these awe-inspiring images.

2014 Winner's list in full:

Earth and Space

  • James Woodend (UK) with Aurora over a Glacier Lagoon (Winner and Overall Winner)
  • Matt James (Australia) with Wind Farm Star Trails (Runner-up)
  • Patrick Cullis (USA) with Moon Balloon (Highly Commended)
  • Catalin Beldea (Romania) with Totality from Above the Clouds (Highly Commended)
  • O Chul Kwon (South Korea) with Venus-Lunar Occultation (Highly Commended)

Deep Space

  • Bill Snyder (USA) with Horsehead Nebula (IC 434)  (Winner)
  • David Fitz-Henry (Australia) with The Helix Nebula (NGC 7293) (Runner-Up)
  • J.P Metsävainio (Finland) with Veil Nebula Detail (IC 1340) (Highly Commended)
  • Rogelio Bernal Andreo (USA) with California vs Pleiades (Highly Commended)
  • Marco Lorenzi (China) with At the Feet of Orion (NGC 1999) – Full Field (Highly Commended)

Our Solar System

  • Alexandra Hart (UK) with Ripples in a Pond (Winner)
  • George Tarsoudis (Greece) with Best of the Craters (Runner-Up)
  • Alexandra Hart (UK) with Solar Nexus (Highly Commended)
  • Stephen Ramsden (USA) with Calcium K Eruption (Highly Commended)
  • Tunç Tezel (Turkey) with Diamond and Rubies (Highly Commended)

Young Astronomy Photographer of the Year

  • Shishir & Shashank Dholakia (USA, aged 15) with The Horsehead Nebula (IC 434) (Winner)
  • Emmett Sparling (Canada, aged 15) with New Year over Cypress Mountain (Runner-up)
  • Olivia Williamson (UK, aged 10) with The Martian Territory (Highly Commended)
  • Shishir & Shashank Dholakia (USA, aged 15) with The Heart Nebula (IC 1805) (Highly Commended)
  • Emily Jeremy (UK, aged 12) with Moon Behind the Trees (Highly Commended)

Special Prize: People and Space

  • Eugen Kamenew (Germany) with Hybrid Solar Eclipse 2 (Winner)
  • Julie Fletcher (Australia) with Lost Souls (Runner-up)

Special Prize: Sir Patrick Moore prize for Best Newcomer

  • Chris Murphy (New Zealand) with Coastal Stairways (Winner)

Robotic Scope Image of the Year

  • Mark Hanson (USA) with NGC 3718 (Winner)

Join our commenting forum

Join thought-provoking conversations, follow other Independent readers and see their replies

Comments

Thank you for registering

Please refresh the page or navigate to another page on the site to be automatically logged inPlease refresh your browser to be logged in