Transits of Mars

General discussion about Celestia that doesn't fit into other forums.

Evil Dr Ganymede
Posts: 1386
Joined: 06.06.2003
With us: 21 years 5 months

Post #2by Evil Dr Ganymede » 13.06.2004, 03:36

Hey, if you zoom in real close you can just about see Phobos against Jupiter's clouds! :)

And here's Mars with a few new moons, from later in the last transit :)

cel://Follow/Sol:Earth/2959-03-09T18:16:38.21064?x=EI8qoToPhHCvDA&y=yuL4j6nsl/3//////////w&z=pPtQolxMxoT5/////////w&ow=0.573082&ox=0.006889&oy=0.819454&oz=0.004878&select=Sol:Mars&fov=0.004554&ts=0.010000<d=0&rf=40339&lm=49152


I wonder when the last Mars-Jupiter Transit was... Or for that matter, when the next transit of Earth across the Sun is as seen from Mars. It's a pity that the Eclipse finder can't figure these things out. :(

Calculus
Posts: 216
Joined: 19.10.2002
With us: 22 years 1 month
Location: NY

Post #3by Calculus » 13.06.2004, 08:00

Evil Dr Ganymede wrote:I wonder when the last Mars-Jupiter Transit was... Or for that matter, when the next transit of Earth across the Sun is as seen from Mars. It's a pity that the Eclipse finder can't figure these things out. :(


Actually, if I recall well what Chris told me, the way the eclipse finder is developped, it could do that. It is just a matter of user interface.
Maybe if more people ask for it...
---Paul
My Gallery of Celestial Phenomena:
http://www.celestiaproject.net/gallery/view_al ... e=Calculus


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