by jerbil » Wed Sep 30, 2009 5:59 pm
I find this magnificent composite photograph extremely difficult to interpret. I presume that the ring system and the accompanying shepherd moonlets are coplanar, so that at equinox they contribute a single dark line of shadow on the upper Saturnian cloud layer.
Underneath what I interpret as this line, there are numerous other shadow lines, at least as strong, which I can only put down from the description of the photograph as the "elongated shadows" from out-of-plane objects, though why they should be so strong escapes me, as does the fact that they are grouped together.
Furthermore, to the far right and at the immediate bottom of the image, there are bright arcs, while the insolation clearly comes from the left.
Would someone please explain this anomoly? Is it an artefact from combining many photographs into one composite?
I find this magnificent composite photograph extremely difficult to interpret. I presume that the ring system and the accompanying shepherd moonlets are coplanar, so that at equinox they contribute a single dark line of shadow on the upper Saturnian cloud layer.
Underneath what I interpret as this line, there are numerous other shadow lines, at least as strong, which I can only put down from the description of the photograph as the "elongated shadows" from out-of-plane objects, though why they should be so strong escapes me, as does the fact that they are grouped together.
Furthermore, to the far right and at the immediate bottom of the image, there are bright arcs, while the insolation clearly comes from the left.
Would someone please explain this anomoly? Is it an artefact from combining many photographs into one composite?