It happens rather frequently, but usually with deep space imagery. This doesn't bother me so much as when someone comes to tell us that the moon is wrong because it was shot in the southern hemisphere or along the equator or something. If there's some standard north up, fine, but northern-hemisphere-centrism is tiresome.Cousin Ricky wrote:I understand well that there is often a fine line between pedantry and correcting someone who is just plain wrong, but asking for a correctly oriented astrophoto is not even wrong.
APOD: Venus and Jupiter are Far (2015 Jul 03)
- geckzilla
- Ocular Digitator
- Posts: 9180
- Joined: Wed Sep 12, 2007 12:42 pm
- Location: Modesto, CA
- Contact:
Re: APOD: Venus and Jupiter are Far (2015 Jul 03)
Just call me "geck" because "zilla" is like a last name.
Re: APOD: Venus and Jupiter are Far (2015 Jul 03)
Why does Venus look like it was cut and pasted into the final image? There is an obvious square around Venus which has a slightly different background color than the rest of the image.
Re: APOD: Venus and Jupiter are Far (2015 Jul 03)
mccolingrath wrote:Why does Venus look like it was cut and pasted into the final image? There is an obvious square around Venus which has a slightly different background color than the rest of the image.
APOD Robot wrote:...stack of images[/url]...
Re: APOD: Venus and Jupiter are Far (2015 Jul 03)
I've admired APOD for a long time. There are so many superb images of the universe, be it faraway galaxies or our own solar system. And then our own sun and moon, which constitute much of my work.
Jupiter looks particularly nice with its marble-like stripes. No big spot to spoil it in this shot.
Jupiter looks particularly nice with its marble-like stripes. No big spot to spoil it in this shot.