Post
by MarkBour » Sat Jul 02, 2016 4:27 am
Speaking of how various solar system bodies appear from each other ...
I like to imagine a civilization on either Ganymede or Titan arising on the "outer" side of these tidally-locked moons, and its inhabitants like unto us in our early exploratory periods of around the 1400s and 1500s. One day an intrepid resident of one of those two moons takes a journey, far from her home. As she progresses around the moon, she would come to see a most amazing sight arising on the horizon (but only with her movement).
What would this first encounter with Jupiter or Saturn in the sky look like? How large and how bright?
Someone should check my calculations. I have:
Luna R = 1737 km, Earth R = 6371 km, Jupiter R = 69,911 km, Saturn R = 58,232 km (without rings)
Earth-Lunar distance = 384,400 km, Ganymede-Jupiter distance = 1,070,400 km, Titan-Saturn distance = 1,221,870 km.
From these, I'd estimate that Saturn, hanging in the sky of Titan, is around 10.5 times the visual angle of the Moon from Earth. Jupiter, hanging in the sky of Ganymede is roughly 14.5 times the visual angle of our Moon from Earth! (Of course on our own Moon, such a traveler, when encountering Earth's beautiful blue orb, would see something roughly 3.6 times the visual angle of the Moon from our skies. But from our knowledge of life on Earth, I never thought much about inhabitants of the Moon.) Still, I like to imagine how amazingly beautiful and awe-inspiring such a first encounter would be. And how ridiculous it would sound when this traveler told her countrymen back home what she had found. Especially the rings on Saturn ... they would claim her journey caused hallucinations and lunacy.
Mark Goldfain