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A terrific Saturn animation

Posted 09-02-2009 by Michael Bakich

Saturn animationLunar and planetary imager Alan Friedman of Buffalo, New York, just sent me a terrific animation he made of Saturn. And it took him a while to do it. Friedman combined 6 years of Saturn observations to create the animation. It shows how the plane of the planet’s ring system has changed during that time as viewed from Earth.

The animation’s final frame is not an image Friedman captured at the telescope. He assembled that frame from earlier 2009 observations to display how the planet will appear September 4, 2009, when the rings will lie edge-on to our line of sight.

Saturn On that date, only 11° separates Saturn and the Sun, and the planet will be only 5° above the horizon at sunset. That situation makes Saturn almost impossible to observe.

In the fall of 2009, Saturn will emerge from the Sun’s glare in the early morning sky. At that time, observers on Earth will have their first glimpses of its north pole in 14 years.

Friedman used a 10-inch Astro-Physics Maksutov-Cassegrain telescope and an Imaging Source DMK21AF04 CCD camera to record the images. You can see the individual photographs in the second image.

See additional images of Saturn in our Online Reader Gallery.

Comments



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  • WABarry said:

    Incredible animation!!   Such consistent image quality from one frame to the next.  I love the way the moon lightens as the rings move edge on.  Very cool.  

    September 2, 2009 3:11 PM
  • theghost_69 said:

    That is so awesome. I can't wait until I get my scope set up to take photos. I just wish I had a bigger scope to see farther and get better pictures in the long run. Maybe one day we will be able to get our pictures from outer space and not from Nasa. Clear skies for all.

    September 4, 2009 8:57 AM
  • mattc924 said:

    thats amazing!!! i should start setting up my telescope with my camera.

    September 4, 2009 5:28 PM
  • LeoNebula86 said:

    thats an amazing frame-by-frame animation, i hope that i have my scope set up in the right area. i havent taken pics of any of the planets in the past 3 years.

    September 9, 2009 9:39 AM

About Michael Bakich

Michael Bakich
  Michael Bakich is a senior editor with Astronomy magazine.
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