Look up on a dark summer night in the northern hemisphere and you see a river of stars flowing across the sky.
This is the Milky Way, a glowing mass of millions of distant stars populating the spiral arms of the Galaxy we live in. Lining the arms are lanes of dark interstellar dust, seen here splitting the Milky Way in two from the bright red North America Nebula at top, down to the core of the Galaxy in Sagittarius on the horizon. The dust is the soot created in stars and blown into space to form a new generation stars and planets.
This ultra-wide-angle scene takes in almost the entire summer Milky Way from the southern horizon to beyond the zenith overhead at top. I shot this a couple of nights ago from my rural backyard on a particularly transparent and dark night. It was heaven on Earth.
— Alan, July 26, 2012 / © @ 2012 Alan Dyer
Where exactly was this photo taken? Its amazing !!
I shot this from southern Alberta, Canada.