by Anobium » Thu Jun 09, 2016 11:25 am
I did not appreciate sufficiently the view of Pluto from the rear when it was first released, probably because the sunlit images were so breathtaking. I now have the leisure to admire and wonder at the nightside image.
Excluding solar eclipse photos, which, as the name implies, we think of as images of the sun, not the moon, what bodies of the solar system have we photographed from the nightside? There can't be many, since most bodies would appear as black on black, nearly invisible, particularly if there is no atmosphere and lighting is dependent upon reflection from another body, an "earth" glow equivalent. The moons of Jupiter and Saturn seem like obvious candidates. Has Dawn attempted this with Vesta or Ceres?
I did not appreciate sufficiently the view of Pluto from the rear when it was first released, probably because the sunlit images were so breathtaking. I now have the leisure to admire and wonder at the nightside image.
Excluding solar eclipse photos, which, as the name implies, we think of as images of the sun, not the moon, what bodies of the solar system have we photographed from the nightside? There can't be many, since most bodies would appear as black on black, nearly invisible, particularly if there is no atmosphere and lighting is dependent upon reflection from another body, an "earth" glow equivalent. The moons of Jupiter and Saturn seem like obvious candidates. Has Dawn attempted this with Vesta or Ceres?