In 2017, Jim Webster began going out at night near his New Jersey home to take pictures of our galaxy. With a 14-millimeter lens and a DSLR, he would capture long exposures of the Milky Way galaxy, revealing the delicate filaments of nebulae and countless clusters of stars hidden within the band of the galaxy’s arm.
It was a rekindling of a childhood passion for science and astronomy, first sparked by learning about the Apollo program at school. At home, Webster would stick his telescope out of his second-floor apartment window in Brooklyn to look at the Moon.
Webster’s childhood apartment, at center left above the restaurant. (Credit: Jim Webster)
Jim Webster
Now, decades later, after time in the Air Force and years working for Verizon, Webster had returned to his childhood passion. But the night sky had changed in the intervening time, and something else was turning up in ...