Photography
Related: About this forumDisappearing moon (now with enlarged photos)
Last edited Sat Nov 30, 2024, 03:01 PM - Edit history (1)
While out under the stars shooting the Orion Nebula last night, I also took some shots of Saturn and Jupiter. The Saturn shots were a bust, but my first shots of Jupiter included four of the planet's moons: Io, Europa, Ganymede and Callisto. Three hours later, one of the moons had disappeared behind the planet. The moon was probably Io, which of the four has the shortest orbital period around Jupiter: 1.7 Earth days. Europa's is 3.5 days, Ganymede's is 7.1, and Callisto's is 16.6 Earth days. Nothing is static in the night sky.
***I've replaced the originals with enlargements for easier viewing***
11:33 PM, November 29, facing east
2:21 AM, November 30, facing west
Nigrum Cattus
(143 posts)Mousetoescamper
(5,288 posts)Diamond_Dog
(34,903 posts)Isnt it crazy to think we can see Jupiters moons from Earth? Very cool!
I was out around 6:30 to pick up a pizza - it was dusk but getting darker by the minute - and I saw a bright spot of light in the west-southwest sky, all by itself. I wonder if it could have been a planet, although you would think Id see stars,too, and I didnt see any stars.
Mousetoescamper
(5,288 posts)Ummm. Pizza.
You probably saw Venus, the brightest planet and the third brightest object in the sky, after the Sun and Moon. It can sometimes be seen before sunrise and just after sunset. Venus sets around 7:30 tonight; look to the west after sunset and you might see it gain, weather permitting.
CaliforniaPeggy
(152,227 posts)Mousetoescamper
(5,288 posts)CaliforniaPeggy
(152,227 posts)I just wanted to come back into your thread to tell you how impressed I am with these new ones.
You have come into your own!