Grimm Reaper Photography

Grimm Reaper Photography I'm an amateur photographer from regional South Australia. Samsung S22 Ultra camera

Quick drive to Point Lowley & Fitzgerald Bay just out of Whyalla SA last week. So serene out there :)
25/02/2026

Quick drive to Point Lowley & Fitzgerald Bay just out of Whyalla SA last week. So serene out there :)

That “meteor colour chart” meme floating around the internet (the one that claims blue meteors are magnesium, green are ...
16/08/2025

That “meteor colour chart” meme floating around the internet (the one that claims blue meteors are magnesium, green are nickel, orange are sodium, etc.) is misleading and oversimplified. Meteors don’t behave like neat flame tests in a lab. Their colours are much more complex and depend on several overlapping factors.

Plasma Emission from Ionized Air (Primary Cause) - When a meteoroid slams into the atmosphere at tens of km/s, it compresses and heats the air in front of it. The air becomes ionized plasma, which glows at specific wavelengths. The dominant emission is often green from excited atomic oxygen (similar to auroras), especially around ~90–120 km altitude. This is why bright green fireballs are so common.

Meteor Speed and Energy - Faster meteors (e.g., Leonids at ~70 km/s) reach higher temperatures, exciting different atmospheric molecules. The temperature affects which wavelengths dominate. Cooler meteors may glow reddish or yellowish; hotter ones often look bluish-green or pure white.

Fragmentation & Density - If the meteoroid breaks apart violently, the sudden burst of plasma can briefly shift colours. Denser, slower meteors may glow more orange-red.

Metallic Emission from the Meteoroid (Secondary Role) - Some vaporized meteoroid atoms do emit light. Sodium → strong orange/yellow line. Magnesium → greenish-white. Iron → bluish-white. But this is mixed with atmospheric glow and plasma radiation, so the colours can’t be matched 1:1 to composition like the viral graphic suggests.

Why Green is Most Common - Oxygen emissions (557.7 nm green line) dominate in the upper atmosphere. The human eye is also most sensitive to green light in the dark, so even when the spectrum is mixed, we often perceive meteors as green. Sodium (orange-yellow) also contributes, but usually only in bursts or flares.

In short: Meteor colour is a combination of atmospheric chemistry, plasma physics, meteoroid speed, and human eye sensitivity — not just the rock’s chemical makeup.

Another bucket list item ticked off. Finally got comet pics. Last one a saw was Halley's Comet in 1986, well before digi...
19/10/2024

Another bucket list item ticked off. Finally got comet pics. Last one a saw was Halley's Comet in 1986, well before digital cameras.

Waited my whole life for this! Aurora Australis. Captured last night in Whyalla SA. :D So happy I was able to capture it...
11/05/2024

Waited my whole life for this! Aurora Australis. Captured last night in Whyalla SA. :D So happy I was able to capture it :D

I love this pic. I always enjoy capturing sunrises/sunsets :D
12/01/2024

I love this pic. I always enjoy capturing sunrises/sunsets :D

HAPPY NEW YEAR GUYS!!! :D I'm getting in early as I'll be in bed early tonight :)
30/12/2023

HAPPY NEW YEAR GUYS!!! :D

I'm getting in early as I'll be in bed early tonight :)

25/12/2023

Merry Christmas everyone!! Hope you all had a great day :D

I took these pics of the sun rays coming through the clouds. The camera really doesn't do it justice.
05/12/2023

I took these pics of the sun rays coming through the clouds. The camera really doesn't do it justice.

Some great cloud formations around this morning :D
27/11/2023

Some great cloud formations around this morning :D

22/10/2023
Some sunrise pics from yesterday.
22/10/2023

Some sunrise pics from yesterday.

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Whyalla, SA
5608

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