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Originally posted by Phage
reply to post by habfan1968
The image is a bit confusing.
Remember, we're looking at Saturn with the Sun behind it. We are in the the shadow of the planet. The reason we can see this side of Saturn at all (instead of it being completely black) is because light is reflected by the sunlit portions of the rings.
So the reason the rings disappear is because they are in the shadow of Saturn. We cannot really see them on our side at all, what appears to be rings circling on our side are actually areas on the "surface" of Saturn which are receiving less reflected light from the darker areas of the ring and the "shadow" of those rings from the reflected light from Saturn. The bright rings don't cast the shadows.
This image, from a different viewpoint, might help.
edit on 9/9/2011 by Phage because: (no reason given)
Originally posted by Anonymouth
Best thing you will ever buy in your life, is your first telescope lol, once you do that, it WON'T be your last.
Slap a solar filter / wedge onto a refractor, and watch the sun in white light. Awesome. You don't have to look far for awesome. Moon, Sun.
For planets, you really need a decent reflector (mirrors) and a good EQ mount, say an EQ5 minimum or EQ6.
Slap a DSLR onto a T-Ring and take some exposures.
Cheap, you can do it for $1000 easy, perhaps less.
No, DSLR? Strap on a webcam.
I am sure most people have binoculars, try those out
edit on 9-9-2011 by Anonymouth because: (no reason given)
Originally posted by Phage
reply to post by Newbomb Turk
How is the fact that this is not a new image (something that some of us are completely aware of) a demonstration of NASA lying? Where has NASA said this is a new image?
apod.nasa.gov...
Originally posted by XplanetX
God's creation is amazing!
Or is that umm errr... a NASA creation?
Originally posted by Phage
reply to post by elrey72011
Even when I look at Saturn with a telescope I have a hard time convincing myself it's not a cheesy special effect.
It's too weirdly beautiful to be real.