PHOTOS: Astronomy Photographer of the Year winners

Thursday, September 18, 2014
A British photographer is named Astronomy Photographer of the Year.

James Woodend wins the title over a thousand other amateur and professional photographers from around the globe.

The judges say they were mesmerized by Woodend's photo of a vivid green aurora dancing across the Icelandic night sky and reflected symmetrically in the glacial Jkulsarlon lagoon of Vatnajkull National Park.

A vivid green overheaded aurrora pictured in Iceland's Vatnajokull National Park reflected almost symetrically in Jokulsrlon Glacier lagoon.

James Woodend


Woodend's winning shot of the Northern Lights is the first time a picture of the auroras has won the Astronomy Photographer of the Year prize.

Other photos drawing praise from the judges include:
  • A breath-taking view of the Earth taken from the brink of space (87,000 feet above the ground), with the help of a high altitude balloon launched from Boulder, Colorado by Patrick Cullis (USA)

    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.

    Patrick Cullis

  • The snaking swirls of super heated gas on the boiling surface of the Sun captured by Alexandra Hart (UK)

    The Sun's boiling surface curves away beneath us in this evocative shot that conveys the scale and violence of our star.

    Alexandra Hart

  • A figure silhouetted against the backdrop of a Kenyan Savannah skyline and a rarely seen hybrid solar eclipse, taken by Eugen Kamenew (Germany)

    The Royal Observatory unveiled the winners of its annual Astronomy Photographer of the Year competition

    Eugen Kamenew

  • A stark yet opulent portrayal of the rock formations of the Wairarapa district in New Zealand, contrasting with the dusty clouds dancing across the Milky Way photographed by Chris Murphy (New Zealand)

    Rock formation in the Wairarapa district of New Zeland create a stark foreground and contrast to the dusty clouds dancing acorss the Milky Way.

    Chris Murphy


Astronomy Photographer of the Year is run by the Royal Observatory Greenwich and BBC Sky at Night Magazine. This is the 6th year for the competition. The competition received a record +2500 entries from 51 countries.



For information about entering next year's competition visit www.rmg.co.uk/astrophoto.

Scroll through the gallery above to see all the stunning photos from the contest.
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