by BobStein-VisiBone » Fri Mar 11, 2016 7:46 pm
Boomer12k wrote:
The Moon is still off to the left...and it is not an animation...
:---[===] *
I wondered the same thing, Gerden.
Boomer, I first thought the moon must be to the left since its shadow is left of the sun's reflection point, the bright spot near the center. But now I think the moon was actually above and right of the Earth, and here's why. If you look at the edge of the Earth in this photo, it's fuzzy between about the 5 and 8 oclock positions, and sharp everywhere else. This must mean that the DSCOVR satellite was a little off from being directly between Earth and Sun. So a line between Earth and Sun centers in this photo would exit at about the
1 or 2 oclock direction. And the moon must be very near that.
I wish they had zoomed out a little to catch the moon in this picture. But I'm definitely not complaining.
[quote="Boomer12k"][quote="gerden"]Can anyone tell me, why we don't see the moon in the photograph?
As e.g. compared to here:
[url]http://www.nasa.gov/feature/goddard/from-a-million-miles-away-nasa-camera-shows-moon-crossing-face-of-earth[/url]
Thanks in advance
Simon[/quote]
The Moon is still off to the left...and it is not an animation...
:---[===] *[/quote]
I wondered the same thing, Gerden.
Boomer, I first thought the moon must be to the left since its shadow is left of the sun's reflection point, the bright spot near the center. But now I think the moon was actually above and right of the Earth, and here's why. If you look at the edge of the Earth in this photo, it's fuzzy between about the 5 and 8 oclock positions, and sharp everywhere else. This must mean that the DSCOVR satellite was a little off from being directly between Earth and Sun. So a line between Earth and Sun centers in this photo would exit at about the [b]1 or 2 oclock direction[/b]. And the moon must be very near that.
I wish they had zoomed out a little to catch the moon in this picture. But I'm definitely not complaining.