you can find out more about the fermi space scope here
http://fermi.gsfc.nasa.gov/
in the second picture, the lower left light is the sun, not the entire solar system;
the reason it looks so small, is simply, because the oval picture you see is in fact what is called a mollweide equal area map projection of a sphere, the entire sky in this case (but could also be the surface of a planet if you like); so obviously, if you are going to take a picture that doesn't include just what is in front of you, but also what is above you, below, behind, to the right and left, and put it all in a single picture, then what you see in front of you appears smaller, because it is relative to the entire view all around you; it is just a matter of perspective;
as for the mollweide projection itself, the reason NASA likes to use it is because it has the special property that a square centimeter of map anywhere on the map is proportional to the actual sphere - so if a square cm of map is a square km of planet or sky, then it is the same all over the map; comparatively, a rectangular map like your ordinary wall map, which also shows the entire planet (or sky) also maps a sphere onto a picture, rectangular instead of an oval mollweide, however, it is distorted - in a rectangular map, a square centimeter near the pole covers far more square km than near the equator, so it is stretched and does not represent the surface correctly - but it is easy to map onto a sphere by a computer; if you just want to see the entire sky or planet in one picture, mollweide is better;
Ann wrote:SoonieKoo wrote:I am a "newbie" to APOD, but enjoy the images. My question is "How was today's image taken"? What is THAT far out in space that makes our solar system look THAT small?
Good question, and I'm not the right person to answer it. But the Fermi telescope is a space telescope, which is either orbiting the Earth or possibly stationary in one of the Lagrange points between the Earth and the Moon.
Ann