Re: APOD: The First Color Panorama from Mars... (2012 Aug 11
Posted: Mon Aug 13, 2012 4:38 pm
Hello,
coming back to the "you landed on Mars and opened your eyes" part, the following question arose during lunch with my colleagues: why does it look so bright on Mars? From the picture I get the feeling that it is as bright on Mars as on a normal day on Earth. From Wikipedia I got that Mars is about 50% farther away from the sun than Earth (1.5 AU compared to 1AU). So I would expect it to receive only 44% of the sunlight intensity. Would this compare to dawn or dusk or a cloudy day on Earth? Maybe our eyes can easily adopt to such a reduced intensity? Or did they use a longer exposure time to make the picture as bright?
Thanks for your help!
coming back to the "you landed on Mars and opened your eyes" part, the following question arose during lunch with my colleagues: why does it look so bright on Mars? From the picture I get the feeling that it is as bright on Mars as on a normal day on Earth. From Wikipedia I got that Mars is about 50% farther away from the sun than Earth (1.5 AU compared to 1AU). So I would expect it to receive only 44% of the sunlight intensity. Would this compare to dawn or dusk or a cloudy day on Earth? Maybe our eyes can easily adopt to such a reduced intensity? Or did they use a longer exposure time to make the picture as bright?
Thanks for your help!