cool pic of Saturn

Jan 18, 2001
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http://antwrp.gsfc.nasa.gov/apod/image/0610/newrings_cassini_big.jpg

for info and more links:
http://antwrp.gsfc.nasa.gov/apod/astropix.html

Explanation: In the shadow of Saturn, unexpected wonders appear. The robotic Cassini spacecraft now orbiting Saturn recently drifted in giant planet's shadow for about 12 hours and looked back toward the eclipsed Sun. Cassini saw a view unlike any other. First, the night side of Saturn is seen to be partly lit by light reflected from its own majestic ring system. Next, the rings themselves appear dark when silhouetted against Saturn, but quite bright when viewed away from Saturn and slightly scattering sunlight, in the above exaggerated color image. Saturn's rings light up so much that new rings were discovered, although they are hard to see in the above image. Visible in spectacular detail, however, is Saturn's E ring, the ring created by the newly discovered ice-fountains of the moon Enceladus, and the outermost ring visible above. Far in the distance, visible on the image left just above the bright main rings, is the almost ignorable pale blue dot of Earth.
 

purbeast0

No Lifer
Sep 13, 2001
53,757
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woah thats pretty damn cool, although I still have no clue where earth is on that picture heh, even after reading the description of where it's located.
 

ChaoZ

Diamond Member
Apr 5, 2000
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Originally posted by: purbeast0
woah thats pretty damn cool, although I still have no clue where earth is on that picture heh, even after reading the description of where it's located.

Lower left of the ring, I think.
 
Jan 18, 2001
14,465
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Originally posted by: purbeast0
woah thats pretty damn cool, although I still have no clue where earth is on that picture heh, even after reading the description of where it's located.

its the blueish dot to the left of the planet near the main rings...
 

Spacehead

Lifer
Jun 2, 2002
13,067
9,858
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Originally posted by: purbeast0
woah thats pretty damn cool, although I still have no clue where earth is on that picture heh, even after reading the description of where it's located.

I think Earth is easier to see if you look at http://antwrp.gsfc.nasa.gov/apod/astropix.html
instead of the "big" picture.
It's outside of the brighter rings & inside of the the 2 outer, faint rings, at about the 9:30-10 o'clock position.


After today, the link to this pic will be http://antwrp.gsfc.nasa.gov/apod/ap061016.html
 

Injury

Lifer
Jul 19, 2004
13,066
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Damn... it would be sweet if they made a tool for google homepage to read the description of the picture then click on it to see the picture.

If I knew how I'd make one. :(
 

middlehead

Diamond Member
Jul 11, 2004
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Injury

Lifer
Jul 19, 2004
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Originally posted by: Vegitto

If the Earth is such a small dot when you're orbiting a planet IN OUR SOLAR SYSTEM, how do we expect aliens possibly living dozens of lightyears away to notice our tiny, tiny blue dot?



If they've accomplished the goal of travelling from one solar system to the next, I could only assume that finding a way to detect planets and determine if they have advanced forms of life is a minor acheivement.

I'm not of the persuasion that aliens visit us, but I have no trouble believing that life exists on other planets. Look at every star in the sky. There's no way that none of those stars have their own planets, and I wouldn't be surprised if some of them have hundreds, maybe even thousands of them! The hundreds of stars you can see on a clear night isn't even a taste of the number that have been recorded through the use of technology, and of the potential billions upon billions of planets, the odds that not a single one of them have seen some form of life is "astronomical".