
ISS Transits Saturn
From low Earth orbit to the outer Solar System, this remarkable video frame composite follows the International Space Station's transit of Saturn. On January 15, the well-timed capture from a site near Dulmen, Germany required telescope and camera to be positioned along the predicted transit centerline, a path only 40 meters wide.
That put the camera about 1,140 kilometers away from the space station during the transit and 1,600,000,000 kilometers away from Saturn. A video rate of 42 frames per second follows the orbital outpost moving quickly from lower right to upper left. The transit itself lasted about 0.02 seconds, with one frame showing the station directly in front of the ringed gas giant. Of course, you could also try to capture the International Space Station as it transits Jupiter.
Image & info via APOD
Image Credit & Copyright: Julian Wessel
http://apod.nasa.gov/apod/astropix.html
#nasa #astrophotography #ISS #Saturn #space
Then what is the size of Saturn ?
ReplyDeleteIt takes an astonishing level of planning to accomplish something like this. Hats off to the photographer!
ReplyDeleteReminiscent of Odysseus's supernatural precision shooting of an arrow through aligned holes -- the challenge Penelope invents when he finally returns to Ithaca.
ReplyDelete