By Iain Todd

Published: Tuesday, 02 July 2024 at 07:41 AM


The shortlisted images from the Astronomy Photographer of the Year 2024 competition have been released by the Royal Observatory Greenwich.

Among this year’s shortlisted entries are dazzling displays of aurorae, ancient galaxies, views of our Milky Way galaxy stretching across the night sky, an explosive meteor shower display, cosmic clouds and the International Space Station passing in front of the Moon.

The International Space Station Daytime Moon Transit © Kelvin Hennessy (Australia). Category: Our Moon. Taken with a Saxon ED127 FCD100 Triplet Refractor telescope, Baader IR/UV filter, Sky-Watcher EQ6-R mount, ZWO 294MC Pro camera, 952 mm f/7.5, Gain 192, 1-millisecond exposure. Location: Gold Coast, Queensland, Australia, 3 February 2024

Now in its 16th year, Astronomy Photographer of the Year is the biggest astrophotography competition in the world, and in 2024 received over 3,500 entries from 58 countries across the globe.

Entrants can submit images across a range of categories including People & Space; Planets, Comets & Asteroids; Our Sun; Our Moon; Aurorae; and Stars & Nebulae.

Special prizes include the Sir Patrick Moore Prize for Best Newcomer and the Anne Maunder Prize for Image Innovation, the latter marking the work of image processors manipulating raw space mission data.

And Young Astronomy Photographer of the Year celebrates the work of astro imagers under the age of 16.

Arctic Dragon © Carina Letelier Baeza (Chile) Taken with a Nikon D810A camera, 14 mm f/1.8, ISO 6,400, 2.5-second exposure Location: Raufarhöfn, Iceland, 25 February 2023
Arctic Dragon © Carina Letelier Baeza (Chile). Category: Aurorae. Taken with a Nikon D810A camera, 14 mm f/1.8, ISO 6,400, 2.5-second exposure. Location: Raufarhöfn, Iceland, 25 February 2023

Some of our favourite images from the Astronomy Photographer of the Year 2024 shortlist include Arctic Dragon, which shows a dragon-shaped Northern Lights display over the Arctic Henge in Iceland.

We also did a double-take at an image of spiral galaxy M100, which appears to show a row of bright spots within one of the galaxy’s arms.

This is, in fact, a composite of dwarf planet Ceres drifting in front of the galaxy from our perspective on Earth.

A Cosmic Firework: the Geminid Meteor Shower © Jakob Sahner (Germany) Taken with a Sony ILCE-7M3 camera, Sigma 28 mm f/1.4 lens, Sky-Watcher Star Adventurer mount, 28 mm f/1.4, Sky: 14 panels of 60-second RGB exposures (ISO 1,600), 5 panels of 3 x 180-second H-alpha exposures (ISO 6,400); Foreground: 16 panels of 60-second exposures (ISO 1,600) Location: Roque de los Muchachos, La Palma, Canary Islands, Spain, 11 and 15 December 2023
A Cosmic Firework: the Geminid Meteor Shower © Jakob Sahner (Germany). Category: Skyscapes. Taken with a Sony ILCE-7M3 camera, Sigma 28 mm f/1.4 lens, Sky-Watcher Star Adventurer mount, 28 mm f/1.4, Sky: 14 panels of 60-second RGB exposures (ISO 1,600), 5 panels of 3 x 180-second H-alpha exposures (ISO 6,400); Foreground: 16 panels of 60-second exposures (ISO 1,600). Location: Roque de los Muchachos, La Palma, Canary Islands, Spain, 11 and 15 December 2023

‘A Cosmic Firework’ is a panorama showing the Milky Way and Geminid meteors over the Roque de los Muchachos observatory on the island of La Palma.

You can see all the shortlisted images from the Astronomy Photographer of the Year 2024 competition in our gallery below.

The overall winning images, runners-up and highly commended entries will be announced on Thursday 12 September 2024.

They will be displayed in an exhibition at the National Maritime Museum in Greenwich, London, from Saturday 14 September, alongside a selection of shortlisted images.

APY 16 shortlisted images

Keep up to date with the competition by following the Royal Museums Greenwich on Facebook, X (formerly Twitter) and Instagram.