Cruising through the outer solar system, the Voyager 2 spacecraft made its
closest approach to
Neptune on August 25, 1989, the only spacecraft to visit the most distant
gas giant. Based on the images recorded during its close encounter and in the
following days, this
inspired composited scene covers the dim outer planet, largest moon Triton, and faint system of rings. From just
beyond Neptune's orbit, the interplanetary perspective looks back toward the
Sun, capturing the planet and Triton as thin sunlit
crescents. Cirrus clouds and a dark band circle
Neptune's south polar region, with a cloudy vortex above the pole itself. Parts of the very faint ring system
along with the three bright ring arcs were first imaged by Voyager during the
fly-by, though the faintest segments are modeled in this composited picture.
Spanning 7.5 degrees, the background starfield is composed from sky survey data
centered on the constellation Camelopardalis, corresponding to the outbound
Voyager's view of the magnificent
Neptunian system.
A place were I can write...
My simple blog of pictures of travel, friends, activities and the Universe we live in as we go slowly around the Sun.
May 15, 2014
Voyager 2 and Neptune
Cruising through the outer solar system, the Voyager 2 spacecraft made its
closest approach to
Neptune on August 25, 1989, the only spacecraft to visit the most distant
gas giant. Based on the images recorded during its close encounter and in the
following days, this
inspired composited scene covers the dim outer planet, largest moon Triton, and faint system of rings. From just
beyond Neptune's orbit, the interplanetary perspective looks back toward the
Sun, capturing the planet and Triton as thin sunlit
crescents. Cirrus clouds and a dark band circle
Neptune's south polar region, with a cloudy vortex above the pole itself. Parts of the very faint ring system
along with the three bright ring arcs were first imaged by Voyager during the
fly-by, though the faintest segments are modeled in this composited picture.
Spanning 7.5 degrees, the background starfield is composed from sky survey data
centered on the constellation Camelopardalis, corresponding to the outbound
Voyager's view of the magnificent
Neptunian system.
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