Astrophotography in October 2024: what to shoot in the night sky this coming month

Comet C/2022 E3 (ZTF) over the road in the mountains at nigh
Could a naked-eye comet become visible in October? Canon EOS 5D Mk IV with EF 24-70mm. 300 secs at f/8, ISO 200. (Image credit: Anton Petrus/Getty Images)

Night begins earlier in the northern hemisphere in October, and there are a host of celestial spectacles for astrophotographers this month. From a potentially naked-eye comet, Tsuchinshan-ATLAS, to a 'ring of fire' annular solar eclipse for intrepid eclipse-chasers and the year's biggest 'supermoon,' there's plenty to capture in the night sky. As a bonus, there's the Orionid meteor shower at the end of October, whose 'shooting stars' have an intriguing story behind them that always goes down well on social media.

Here’s everything you need to know about astrophotography in October 2024…

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Jamie Carter
Astrophotography expert

Jamie has been writing about all aspects of technology for over 14 years, producing content for sites like TechRadar, T3, Forbes, Mashable, MSN, South China Morning Post, and BBC Wildlife, BBC Focus and BBC Sky At Night magazines. 

As the editor for www.WhenIsTheNextEclipse.com, he has a wealth of enthusiasm and expertise for all things astrophotography, from capturing the Perseid Meteor Shower, lunar eclipses and ring of fire eclipses, photographing the moon and blood moon and more.

He also brings a great deal of knowledge on action cameras, 360 cameras, AI cameras, camera backpacks, telescopes, gimbals, tripods and all manner of photography equipment.