Top 10 Astronomy Images of 2006 75
The Bad Astronomer writes "Astronomical observatories on the ground and in space return many terabytes of data every year. But which bytes are the best? I combed through thousands of pictures to find the Top 10 astronomy images of the year."
A few others (Score:5, Informative)
Here's a couple other pics that I thought were top 10 material:
Man in space [arrl.org]
Earth from Satellite [wallpaper.net.au]
Re:A few others (Score:4, Insightful)
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Same for the Man in Space picture. Its above average in terms of composition, but there are scores of similar ones.
Re: Waiting for... (Score:1)
Then we can have the top ten Slashdottings of the year.
Best one has shuttle and ISS in front of the Sun (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Best one has shuttle and ISS in front of the Su (Score:2)
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Not sure about #9 (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Not sure about #9 (Score:4, Interesting)
Heh. (Score:5, Funny)
(Oh, admit it - we're all juvenile here.)
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Saturn!!! (Score:1)
Saturn photo (Score:5, Informative)
Luckily, the copy on APoD [nasa.gov] works fine. I thought I'd post it here in case someone else, like me, was looking to make a desktop out of this amazing photo.
More on the Saturn photo (Score:4, Informative)
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If the pattern of previous Slashdottings holds, it'll let up within a day or so.
Re:Saturn photo (Score:5, Informative)
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Thanks for catching that!
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That may be true for the first of the three versions, but the one that was used for the top 1 spot is the "highly exaggerated coluors" version.
Also, I'm not all that impressed with the collage. I downloaded a large size ve
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But you're other claims of manipulations are unfounded. You can claim that the were done, but I was there when the image was assembled. (Admittedly, not the entire time, but I trust my coworker not to try to sneak one past me.) If I have learned one thing from working on the imaging team it has been this: the viewing geometry can fool you. If the rings look disc
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I can buy the planetshine for the B ring illusion, and with the sun being so far away, the light source is almost parallel, which explains why the shadow seems to be exactly at the edge of the planet. But still, shouldn't the rings themselves be visibly obscuring the planet, at least near the edge of the shadow where there
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Oh, I accept that there may be other explanations, but not being an astronomer, I can only make my guesses based on what I know. It's you guys who must be willing to explain what we see.
Sure, but you should have no expectation of seeing that much detail in the typical press-release. More than 99% of the audience won't notice the weird effects and doesn't care about what causes them, so it's up to people who do to ask. :-)
But still, shouldn't the rings themselves be visibly obscuring the planet, at least near the edge of the shadow where there will be reflected light on the rings?
The rings do obscure the planet. Look at the A and B rings where the the optical depths are high enough the block the light. They're dark in front of the planet, especially the very opaque B ring.
And what could possibly cause the effect of wedges apparently missing from the ring at 4 and 8 o'clock? I can't see what could be casting that shadow just there, but not higher up on the rings.
If you're talking about what I think you are, that's Saturn's shadow.
Mirrors of PNG and TIFF (Score:2, Informative)
http://banshee.uchicago.edu/~nathanw/2230_6163_2.
http://banshee.uchicago.edu/~nathanw/2230_6163_3.
A couple of stunning ones (Score:3)
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BTW, the rest of that museum is totally like mecca for any nerd.
-1 Rambling.
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I assume you are talking about these:
http://mmmgroup.altervista.org/e-trees.html [altervista.org]
The new orbiter is about 5-to-10 times clearer than the one that took those "tree" photos. It has a big-ass camera, so if it can get
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The high-res pictures of Mars are giving us real scientifically interesting data, though. Getting pics of the rovers are just a nice bonus.
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Its a great picture, both in scope and quality, but its not the "best ever". There is just so much other stuff out there.
My personal favority currently is the ultra-highres mosaic of M31 from hubble.
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These are my current favorites:
A Zoo of Galaxies [hubblesite.org]
Pismis 24 and NGC 6357 [hubblesite.org] (looks like something from The Neverending Story)
The Hubble Ultra Deep Field [hubblesite.org] (absolutely incredible)
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You can see every H2 region, the interaction with the collision partner, the starburst activity, everything.
And then you have to realize: All this is just one of trillions...
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Those are diffraction patterns and they're caused by the presence of spider supports in the telescope. Any reflector will exhibit the same behaviour (as the secondary is typically mounted in a spider, unless you're lucky enough to have a Schmidt-Cassegrain or similar design, which uses a front corrector plate that also supports the secondary).
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Because it makes the pictures "sort of" HDR. They contain a lot of brightness range that would otherwise simply be clipped by the conversion from countrate to colour.
Best = most aesthetically pleasing (Score:5, Insightful)
I'm not surprised at quality here though. Bad Astronomy is an awesome web site.
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I wonder... (Score:2, Interesting)
Mod Parent UP!! WAAAY UP! (Score:1, Funny)
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Nice compilation (Score:2)
Number One photo is down? (Score:1)
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http://antwrp.gsfc.nasa.gov/apod/ap061016.html [nasa.gov]
We ain't found the subject. (Score:2)
I know this makes me a bad geek... (Score:1)
I mean... we've been so successful in cluttering up our OWN planet... Should we really be that happy about developing the ability to leave tracks and random pieces of machinery lying around a DIFFERENT one?
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Jerry Lodriguss top 25 selection.... (Score:1)
http://www.astropix.com/wp/2006/12/29/top-25-astr