Moon and Venus

General physics and astronomy discussions not directly related to Celestia
Topic author
chris
Site Admin
Posts: 4211
Joined: 28.01.2002
With us: 22 years 10 months
Location: Seattle, Washington, USA

Moon and Venus

Post #1by chris » 30.10.2006, 23:34

A very neat daytime photo of Venus and the Moon together in crescent phase:

http://antwrp.gsfc.nasa.gov/apod/ap061030.html

--Chris

ElChristou
Developer
Posts: 3776
Joined: 04.02.2005
With us: 19 years 10 months

Post #2by ElChristou » 30.10.2006, 23:41

8O nice...
Image

julesstoop
Posts: 408
Joined: 27.03.2002
With us: 22 years 8 months
Location: Leiden, The Netherlands

Post #3by julesstoop » 31.10.2006, 00:31

In this case we have similar taste Chris :)
I was mesmerized by this picture when I saw it earlier today.
Lapinism matters!
http://settuno.com/

Malenfant
Posts: 1412
Joined: 24.08.2005
With us: 19 years 3 months

Post #4by Malenfant » 31.10.2006, 00:58

That is a seriously cool pic :). I didn't realise that Venus was so big compared to the Moon too, thought it'd be smaller than that!
My Celestia page: Spica system, planetary magnitudes script, updated demo.cel, Quad system

buggs_moran
Posts: 835
Joined: 27.09.2004
With us: 20 years 2 months
Location: Massachusetts, USA

Post #5by buggs_moran » 31.10.2006, 01:56

In Celestia, not from Budapest though... cel://SyncOrbit/Earth/2004-05-21T12:55: ... 7&lm=51200
Image

That's very cool, but this is the transit I can't wait for... only 59 more years till Venus transits Jupiter...
cel://SyncOrbit/Earth/2065-11-22T12:41: ... 7&lm=51200
Image

Don't forget to get out there to see Mercury transit Sol on the 8th!
Homebrew:
WinXP Pro SP2
Asus A7N8X-E Deluxe
AMD Athlon XP 3000/333 2.16 GHz
1 GB Crucial RAM
80 GB WD SATA drive
ATI AIW 9600XT 128M

Avatar
Chuft-Captain
Posts: 1779
Joined: 18.12.2005
With us: 19 years

Post #6by Chuft-Captain » 31.10.2006, 06:41

Malenfant wrote:...I didn't realise that Venus was so big compared to the Moon too, thought it'd be smaller than that!

I would imagine this could be explained by telescopic fore-shortening (although they don't state what the focal length and magnification was).
"Is a planetary surface the right place for an expanding technological civilization?"
-- Gerard K. O'Neill (1969)

CATALOG SYNTAX HIGHLIGHTING TOOLS LAGRANGE POINTS


Return to “Physics and Astronomy”