APOD: In the Shadow of Saturn (2013 Nov 13)

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Expand view Topic review: APOD: In the Shadow of Saturn (2013 Nov 13)

Re: APOD: In the Shadow of Saturn (2013 Nov 13)

by Nitpicker » Mon Nov 18, 2013 9:42 am

alter-ego wrote:The separations of multiple object references yield a pixel angular resolution of ≈ 12.4", exactly the WAC. Therefore the sun would illuminate 15.8 pixels.

Edit: Of course the Sun is not in only one spot. Wrt Saturn, it drifts about 1° per hour. That's about 18.5 solar diameters per hour.
And according to the JPL's Solar System Simulator, a few hours after this four-hour photo session, Cassini drifted out of alignment with the Sun-Saturn line, revealing the Sun as shown in this link:

http://space.jpl.nasa.gov/cgi-bin/wspac ... -1&bfov=30

Re: APOD: In the Shadow of Saturn (2013 Nov 13)

by alter-ego » Mon Nov 18, 2013 5:10 am

Nitpicker wrote:
Chris Peterson wrote:
MarkBour wrote:Thanks to all of you for the answers to several of my questions.
Based on Chris Peterson's advice, I plotted a 166-pixel diameter white disk about where I'd guess the sun was.
That was based on the pixel scale of the narrow field camera. From the image description, it sounds as if this composite may be at the scale of the wide field camera, in which case the Sun would appear ten times smaller. Since this is a composite, some other scale may have been used, as well. To be sure, we'd need to calculate the actual scale from some physical reference, like the known angle between a pair of planets.
I estimate the diameter of the Sun should appear as about 0.5% (half of one percent) of the apparent distance between Mars and Earth. (Based on the fact that from Saturn, Mars and Earth were separated at the time by ~10.8° and the Sun has an apparent diameter of 3.25 minutes of arc. This neglects the relatively small distance between Cassini and Saturn, which was about 10 Saturn diameters, not including rings.)
The separations of multiple object references yield a pixel angular resolution of ≈ 12.4", exactly the WAC. Therefore the sun would illuminate 15.8 pixels.

Edit: Of course the Sun is not in only one spot. Wrt Saturn, it drifts about 1° per hour. That's about 18.5 solar diameters per hour.

Re: APOD: In the Shadow of Saturn (2013 Nov 13)

by Nitpicker » Mon Nov 18, 2013 5:02 am

Chris Peterson wrote:
MarkBour wrote:Thanks to all of you for the answers to several of my questions.
Based on Chris Peterson's advice, I plotted a 166-pixel diameter white disk about where I'd guess the sun was.
That was based on the pixel scale of the narrow field camera. From the image description, it sounds as if this composite may be at the scale of the wide field camera, in which case the Sun would appear ten times smaller. Since this is a composite, some other scale may have been used, as well. To be sure, we'd need to calculate the actual scale from some physical reference, like the known angle between a pair of planets.
I estimate the diameter of the Sun should appear as about 0.5% (half of one percent) of the apparent distance between Mars and Earth. (Based on the fact that from Saturn, Mars and Earth were separated at the time by ~10.8° and the Sun has an apparent diameter of 3.25 minutes of arc. This neglects the relatively small distance between Cassini and Saturn, which was about 10 Saturn diameters, not including rings.)

Re: APOD: In the Shadow of Saturn (2013 Nov 13)

by geckzilla » Mon Nov 18, 2013 4:54 am

You've made 10 posts now so you're out of the new users group. There should be an option for uploading file attachments on the full editor when making posts.

Re: APOD: In the Shadow of Saturn (2013 Nov 13)

by MarkBour » Mon Nov 18, 2013 4:51 am

Thank you sirs for the additional info. And I'm wondering about posting images. It appears that if I want to post an image in this discussion, I need to place it on a web server. Of course, as a typical contributor, I will probably drop or move the image after a time. So, it will eventually vanish from this discussion. Alternatively, if APOD were to allow me to upload it, it would be stable, but I can certainly imagine why APOD would not want people uploading images. So, am I going about this the right way?

Re: APOD: In the Shadow of Saturn (2013 Nov 13)

by Chris Peterson » Mon Nov 18, 2013 4:41 am

MarkBour wrote:Thanks to all of you for the answers to several of my questions.
Based on Chris Peterson's advice, I plotted a 166-pixel diameter white disk about where I'd guess the sun was.
That was based on the pixel scale of the narrow field camera. From the image description, it sounds as if this composite may be at the scale of the wide field camera, in which case the Sun would appear ten times smaller. Since this is a composite, some other scale may have been used, as well. To be sure, we'd need to calculate the actual scale from some physical reference, like the known angle between a pair of planets.

Re: APOD: In the Shadow of Saturn (2013 Nov 13)

by geckzilla » Mon Nov 18, 2013 4:41 am

Mark, I saw a simulated view of the shot once and it indicated that the sun was just about peeking out from the lower left of the planet. I found the image again here:
http://saturn.jpl.nasa.gov/news/waveatsaturn/

I'm not sure how accurate the shadows for the simulated picture are but I would guess the positions of the planets and moons are accurate. Another thing to keep in mind is that both Saturn and Cassini are moving about as Cassini is taking all of the exposures necessary to complete the mosaic. It is be more accurate to say that the sun and Saturn's many satellites were in multiple places for the picture. One thing that makes these mosaics difficult to compose is that movement.

Re: APOD: In the Shadow of Saturn (2013 Nov 13)

by MarkBour » Mon Nov 18, 2013 4:19 am

Thanks to all of you for the answers to several of my questions.
Based on Chris Peterson's advice, I plotted a 166-pixel diameter white disk about where I'd guess the sun was.

Image

(I am partly just wondering if I can plot an image in this way.)

I don't have enough experience with photography to know any reason to place the sun off of the location of being centered behind Saturn. If the ring disk is tilted down about 27 degrees, then the rings are seen with sunlight shining through them. I don't see any tilt of the rings in this image either to the left or right, so I'm thinking that it is currently near the middle of Saturn's northern hemisphere summer at this time.

Why does the nearly-outermost ring appear like a bright white circle, while the rings within it are varying shades of khaki, or olive?

Re: APOD: In the Shadow of Saturn (2013 Nov 13)

by alter-ego » Fri Nov 15, 2013 5:04 am

Ann wrote: ... But fascinatingly, right "below" (to the south of) SAO 110928 is a considerably brighter star, HD 18909 (HIP 14176), mag about +8.2! The eighth magnitude star is quite red, too, with a B-V index of about +1.42, very nearly as red as HIP 13295. Why don't we see it? The declination of faint SAO 110928 is +08 29' 38.8", while the declination of HD 18909 is +08 28' 18.9". The right ascensions of both stars are very similar, too, at 03h 02m 48.64s and 03h 02m 49.47s, respectively. Why do we see the "upper", neutral-colored, very faint one, but not the "lower", brighter, quite reddish one?
HIP 14176 is visible, and as you said, so is its neighbor SAO 110928.
Another star that "should" show up, but doesn't, is HD 18262 (HIP 13679). This is a sixth magnitude star (mag around 6.0), spectral class F7IV, B-V index about +0.48. It is located "between" Lambda Ceti and red HIP 13495, but "below" them, at declination +08 22 54.4. Is it hidden behind something, perhaps one of Saturn's rings?
This star does not show up, and as Nitpicker mentioned it is near the margin where many stars are not shown.
There is not a clear, straight-edge boundary that separates star visibility from no stars. This star is bright enough it should've shown up if it were in one of the component images. Maybe stars were selected for removal to camouflage a sharp-edge border yielding a blended image with a "soft" edge. I don't know. My inclination is to retrieve all the Cassini images to see the order in which they were taken and assembled. Nah, not tonight ...

Re: APOD: In the Shadow of Saturn (2013 Nov 13)

by Nitpicker » Thu Nov 14, 2013 10:24 pm

Ann wrote:But fascinatingly, right "below" (to the south of) SAO 110928 is a considerably brighter star, HD 18909 (HIP 14176), mag about +8.2! The eighth magnitude star is quite red, too, with a B-V index of about +1.42, very nearly as red as HIP 13295. Why don't we see it? The declination of faint SAO 110928 is +08 29' 38.8", while the declination of HD 18909 is +08 28' 18.9". The right ascensions of both stars are very similar, too, at 03h 02m 48.64s and 03h 02m 49.47s, respectively. Why do we see the "upper", neutral-colored, very faint one, but not the "lower", brighter, quite reddish one?

Another star that "should" show up, but doesn't, is HD 18262 (HIP 13679). This is a sixth magnitude star (mag around 6.0), spectral class F7IV, B-V index about +0.48. It is located "between" Lambda Ceti and red HIP 13495, but "below" them, at declination +08 22 54.4. Is it hidden behind something, perhaps one of Saturn's rings?
I haven't looked for the missing stars you mention, but I did note earlier that the stars that would/should be apparent around the black periphery of this image, are not there. I assume that a black perimeter was blended into the image to fill in the gaps in the mosaic, and give the overall image a nice balance, by centring the main subject.

Re: APOD: In the Shadow of Saturn (2013 Nov 13)

by Ann » Thu Nov 14, 2013 4:44 pm

Nitpicker and alter-ego, I don't doubt for a moment that you are right about Lambda Ceti and HIP 13495!

I note that Lambda Ceti really is fairly blue. In other words, it really has a relatively blue B-V index, about -0.11. HIP 13295 is rather red, too, with a B-V index of about +1.46.

Far to the left of Lambda Ceti is a rather faint, relatively whitish star. It could be HD 19525 (HIP 14607), mag about 6.3, spectral type G9III, B-V index about +1.03.

Much closer to Lambda Ceti, to the lower left of it, is a very faint star, which is relatively neutral in color. It could be SAO 110928, mag about +10.1, spectral class G(?), B-V index about +0.60. To me this star looks ever so slightly bluish, suggesting that the color balance here is just very slightly blue.

But fascinatingly, right "below" (to the south of) SAO 110928 is a considerably brighter star, HD 18909 (HIP 14176), mag about +8.2! The eighth magnitude star is quite red, too, with a B-V index of about +1.42, very nearly as red as HIP 13295. Why don't we see it? The declination of faint SAO 110928 is +08 29' 38.8", while the declination of HD 18909 is +08 28' 18.9". The right ascensions of both stars are very similar, too, at 03h 02m 48.64s and 03h 02m 49.47s, respectively. Why do we see the "upper", neutral-colored, very faint one, but not the "lower", brighter, quite reddish one?

Another star that "should" show up, but doesn't, is HD 18262 (HIP 13679). This is a sixth magnitude star (mag around 6.0), spectral class F7IV, B-V index about +0.48. It is located "between" Lambda Ceti and red HIP 13495, but "below" them, at declination +08 22 54.4. Is it hidden behind something, perhaps one of Saturn's rings?

Ann

Re: APOD: In the Shadow of Saturn (2013 Nov 13)

by Anthony Barreiro » Thu Nov 14, 2013 7:33 am

Nitpicker wrote:I think that if you were to fit a straight line on the image, between Earth, Venus and Mars, you'd have a pretty good approximation to the Ecliptic plane. Based on that and the date of the image, I estimate Jupiter would be out of frame, above the top edge, somewhat to the left hand side.
Yup.

Re: APOD: In the Shadow of Saturn (2013 Nov 13)

by Nitpicker » Thu Nov 14, 2013 6:17 am

alter-ego wrote:Very good! We agree once again!
Last night I spent some time inspecting the star field across the image and was impressed with faintness reached. The limiting magnitude reached 10+ magnitude. It's odd to see such faint stars next to such a normally dominantly bright planet, but being on the back side and in the Sun's shadow permits longer exposures to pick up both planet details and fainter stars.
And this time we're both right, too! (Don't mention the non-instantaneous black crescent. I mentioned it once, but I think I got away with it!)

Re: APOD: In the Shadow of Saturn (2013 Nov 13)

by alter-ego » Thu Nov 14, 2013 5:56 am

Nitpicker wrote:
Ann wrote:I note that some of the point sources that in most cases are background stars are quite differently colored. There is a very reddish point source to the left of "Jupiter" [Tethys], and a quite blue point source still further to the left.
I think the red and blue point sources are:

Red: HIP 13495, mag 6.5, class M3.

Blue: Lambda Ceti, mag 4.7, class B6III.

(It also looks like the stars far beyond the ring system, around the perimeter of the image, were not captured.)
Very good! We agree once again!
Last night I spent some time inspecting the star field across the image and was impressed with faintness reached. The limiting magnitude reached 10+ magnitude. It's odd to see such faint stars next to such a normally dominantly bright planet, but being on the back side and in the Sun's shadow permits longer exposures to pick up both planet details and fainter stars.

Re: APOD: In the Shadow of Saturn (2013 Nov 13)

by Chris Peterson » Thu Nov 14, 2013 5:23 am

Ann wrote:I note that Venus, Earth and Mars appear to be "perfectly colored". Venus is brilliantly white, Mars is faintly reddish, and the Earth-Moon system is slightly blue. "Jupiter" (or Titan?) is sand-colored, which seems like a reasonable integrated color for a white and brownish striped body at five astronomical units from the Sun. So this is a perfect color picture, then?
There's no such thing. But this image was made using three broadband filters covering red, green, and blue. The overlap between the green and blue filters is suboptimal, but it's still possible to generate a final image with a gamut similar to our eyes, and a reasonable approximation of natural colors... that is, an image similar to what we would see visually. And unlike most astronomical images, which show objects too dim to stimulate our color vision, this scene is actually a bright one.

Re: APOD: In the Shadow of Saturn (2013 Nov 13)

by geckzilla » Thu Nov 14, 2013 5:21 am

:lol: I like it. You could make a stencil out of it and emphasize the moons a bit and spray paint it all over as a secret astronomical society logo. Name all the pieces and you are in the club.

Re: APOD: In the Shadow of Saturn (2013 Nov 13)

by Nitpicker » Thu Nov 14, 2013 5:16 am

owlice wrote:
Anthony Barreiro wrote:
quigley wrote:Absolutely amazing image, and in natural colors. Is there a way to get a print of it, preferably in its highest resolution? I'd love to have it up on my office wall to stare and marvel at.
All NASA images are in the public domain. You could download a high resolution image and take it to your local print shop or use an online printing service to make yourself a poster-sized print. You could even add an inspiring quote, and sell prints online. I might buy one.
But this image isn't solely a NASA image.
Well, if you do run into any legal troubles, you are most welcome to instead use the following image of mine, taken from the other side a month earlier:
SSO_P6_Saturn_in_Virgo_20130614_2131+10_cropped.jpg
Mine is a minimalist variant, appealing to a certain aesthetic, achieved in a single exposure of only 5 seconds, and with a glass of wine in one hand. :wink:

Re: APOD: In the Shadow of Saturn (2013 Nov 13)

by Nitpicker » Thu Nov 14, 2013 4:44 am

Ann wrote:I note that some of the point sources that in most cases are background stars are quite differently colored. There is a very reddish point source to the left of "Jupiter" [Tethys], and a quite blue point source still further to the left.
I think the red and blue point sources are:

Red: HIP 13495, mag 6.5, class M3.

Blue: Lambda Ceti, mag 4.7, class B6III.

(It also looks like the stars far beyond the ring system, around the perimeter of the image, were not captured.)

Re: APOD: In the Shadow of Saturn (2013 Nov 13)

by Nitpicker » Thu Nov 14, 2013 4:10 am

Ann wrote:
Patrick60 wrote:Is that Jupiter at the lower left, visible as a disc at about 8 o'clock?
No one has commented on Patrick60's question so far. I, too would like to know what it is. To me it really looks a bit like Jupiter. And if it isn't Jupiter, then what is it? Titan?

I note that Venus, Earth and Mars appear to be "perfectly colored". Venus is brilliantly white, Mars is faintly reddish, and the Earth-Moon system is slightly blue. "Jupiter" (or Titan?) is sand-colored, which seems like a reasonable integrated color for a white and brownish striped body at five astronomical units from the Sun. So this is a perfect color picture, then?

I note that some of the point sources that in most cases are background stars are quite differently colored. There is a very reddish point source to the left of "Jupiter", and a quite blue point source still further to the left.

Ann
I think that if you were to fit a straight line on the image, between Earth, Venus and Mars, you'd have a pretty good approximation to the Ecliptic plane. Based on that and the date of the image, I estimate Jupiter would be out of frame, above the top edge, somewhat to the left hand side.

Regardless, Ann, you have remarkably colour-perceptive eyes. You frequently make me feel like I see in monochrome.

Re: APOD: In the Shadow of Saturn (2013 Nov 13)

by owlice » Thu Nov 14, 2013 3:44 am

This was answered; it's Tethys.

Re: APOD: In the Shadow of Saturn (2013 Nov 13)

by Ann » Thu Nov 14, 2013 3:43 am

Patrick60 wrote:Is that Jupiter at the lower left, visible as a disc at about 8 o'clock?
No one has commented on Patrick60's question so far. I, too would like to know what it is. To me it really looks a bit like Jupiter. And if it isn't Jupiter, then what is it? Titan?

I note that Venus, Earth and Mars appear to be "perfectly colored". Venus is brilliantly white, Mars is faintly reddish, and the Earth-Moon system is slightly blue. "Jupiter" (or Titan?) is sand-colored, which seems like a reasonable integrated color for a white and brownish striped body at five astronomical units from the Sun. So this is a perfect color picture, then?

I note that some of the point sources that in most cases are background stars are quite differently colored. There is a very reddish point source to the left of "Jupiter", and a quite blue point source still further to the left.

Ann

Re: APOD: In the Shadow of Saturn (2013 Nov 13)

by saturno2 » Thu Nov 14, 2013 3:39 am

Beautiful image, indeed.

Re: APOD: In the Shadow of Saturn (2013 Nov 13)

by owlice » Thu Nov 14, 2013 3:36 am

Anthony Barreiro wrote:
quigley wrote:Absolutely amazing image, and in natural colors. Is there a way to get a print of it, preferably in its highest resolution? I'd love to have it up on my office wall to stare and marvel at.
All NASA images are in the public domain. You could download a high resolution image and take it to your local print shop or use an online printing service to make yourself a poster-sized print. You could even add an inspiring quote, and sell prints online. I might buy one.
But this image isn't solely a NASA image.

Re: APOD: In the Shadow of Saturn (2013 Nov 13)

by Nitpicker » Wed Nov 13, 2013 11:36 pm

Nitpicker wrote:
MTD wrote:The black crescent is Saturn's shadow on the half of the rings closest to Cassini. The shadow shows up only above Saturn because the rings below Saturn are on the other side of Saturn from Cassini's point of view, closer to the Sun, where Saturn can't cast a shadow.

The thin white ring that encircles Saturn is sunlight shining through Saturn's upper atmosphere. The black crescent shadow appears on the outside of the thin ring of atmosphere because the crescent shadow is the shadow of Saturn on the rings closest to Cassini. Parts of the thin ring are less bright because it's blocked by shadows cast by the rings, on the lower half of Saturn, or by the rings themselves, on the upper half.
I must confess to not understanding how that is possible. Does this mean that wherever the rings are unilluminated by direct sunlight, we cannot see them, but can effectively see through them onto the planet, where we can see ringshine from the illuminated parts of the rings?
I think I am finally starting to understand this image. Thanks MTD and others. It would have been more correct for me to say that the denser portions of the unilluminated rings, obscure parts of the ringshine from the planet, from Cassini's point of view (rather than that we can see through the rings). And if the planet did not reflect ringshine, then everything inside the thin white circle outlining the planet would appear black, as well as the narrow crescent above the white circle. Got it. It is not unlike looking at an M.C. Escher print.

Re: APOD: In the Shadow of Saturn (2013 Nov 13)

by Anthony Barreiro » Wed Nov 13, 2013 11:18 pm

MarkBour wrote:...
[*] Following along with the previous question, how coordinated is all of this stuff in the Saturn system? It would be too simple if the equator of Saturn were aligned to the Sun, the rings were right over the equator, and everything rotated together. But perhaps some things are aligned.
The main rings and moons orbit Saturn's equator. Saturn's axis of rotation is tilted about 27 degrees relative to the plane of Saturn's orbit around the Sun. So there are seasons on Saturn just like here on Earth, although each of Saturn's seasons lasts about seven earth years. Because of Saturn's seasonal wobble, we here on Earth see the rings edge-on around Saturn's equinoxes, we see the south side of the rings during Saturn's southern summer, and the north side of the rings during Saturn's northern summer.
MarkBour wrote:...
[*] If Earth, Venus, and Mars were visible as small light disks from this location, does that imply that they were all farther away from Saturn at the time than the Sun? So that light could travel to them and then reflect back to Saturn? Or is it possible to see a planet that is between the Sun and Saturn? Perhaps at a great enough angle, even an object that is closer to Saturn than the Sun would be able to reflect and scatter light, and so be visible against the darkness of space.
Here's a nice online orrery. Mars was on the far side of the Sun from Saturn on July 19, 2013, but Venus and Earth were on the inside parts of their orbits around the Sun as seen from Saturn. Inner planets are bright when they're in their crescent phases as seen from an outer planet, if they're at a great enough elongation from the Sun. Look at Venus in the evening sky these days. She's bright! And if you look through a telescope, she's a crescent!

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