Posted on 03/04/2009 5:50:41 AM PST by sig226

Explanation: Very good telescopic views of Saturn can be expected in the coming days as the ringed planet nears opposition on March 8th, its closest approach to Earth in 2009. Of course, opposition means opposite the Sun in planet Earth's sky - an arrangement that occurs almost yearly for Saturn. But while Saturn itself grows larger in telescopic images, Saturn's rings seem to be vanishing as their tilt to our line-of-sight decreases. In fact, the rings will be nearly invisible, edge-on from our perspective, by September 4. Recorded on February 28, this sharp image was made with the 1 meter telescope at Pic Du Midi, a mountain top observatory in the French Pyrenees. The rings are seen to be tilted nearly edge-on, but remarkable details are visible in the gas giant's cloud bands. The icy moon Tethys appears just beyond the rings at the lower left.
Wonderful pic.
Thanks sig.
Monday morning at 8:00 EST an asteroid the size of the one that leveled Siberia in 1908, missed the Earth by 40,000. Why didn’t Obama say something?
Why would he? I didn’t hear it from anyone else either.
If you have a ping list, please add me to it.
Great photo.
He could’ve stopped it. : )
Maybe he did. It missed, after all. ;^)
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