Jupiter Moons' Orbital Dance Captured By Juno | Time-Lapse Video

preview_player
Показать описание
Callisto, Ganymede, Europa and Io orbit the gas giant in this stunning time-lapse. All the images used were captured prior to June 30, 2016.

credit: NASA
Рекомендации по теме
Комментарии
Автор

Jupiter is sometimes quite bright. Impressive like Venus. With a 10X binocular I saw some of these moons. (I can never see them in a 7X binocular). They looked smaller than stars, but had a distinctness. --No twinkling. Their movements were apparent just by looking again after an hour. Might have been apparent in half an hour.

markprange
Автор

I want you to wait until all 4 of moons get closest to Jupiter altogether . I saw it last April? 2017. It was incredible to look. I dunno when it will happen again next. Let me know, ok

brettkuntze
Автор

NASA is welcome to borrow my 1977 Edmund Scientific Newtonian reflector if they want to save a few bucks on the wide shots. With a beginner reflector telescope you can usually see the Galilean moons nice and sharp, and you can make out  the cloud bands more clearly than seen here. Looking forward to the close-ups though...

Bikewithlove
Автор

Hubble could see into the beginning of the Big Bang and this thing is taking pictures like a iPhone 1? Why not point Hubble at it for a couple of hours? I need that high def non composite feed.

PaulByrd
Автор

Every moon have different orbit and movement varies.

sandysandy
Автор

Where are the stars ? Also the movement is not so fast as shown . If the photograph is taken over a period of long time then it should be intimated by the NASA.

mlpadha
Автор

No You can see the light from the moons and not from the COME ON!!!!

Argoscorp
Автор

Since when is Jupiter a half showing? Fake as. ...

woozyrocketman