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Sunshine on Titan has to be 1/100 of that we have on Earth, because
Titan is 10 time farer than us from the Sun. So, the Huyghen after landing get on a light to get pictures. But how Huyghens could take landscape pictures? ÿóÿý L' U N I O N E fa la forza |
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rnesto wrote:
But how Huyghens could take landscape pictures? You said that Saturn has 1/100th the sunlight that Earth does, which is correct. However, let me say that another way: "At Saturn's orbit, there is about 14 watts per square meter." Some comparisons: If you put a single 100-watt lightbulb in a 3m x 3m room (a bedroom), you would have 11.1 watts per square meter. At night, you would probably think that the bedroom was brightly lit. The light of a full moon on Earth is enough for careful landscape photography. When your eyes adapt to full moonlight, it can even seem bright. But it is only .001 watts per square meter. Titan starts off with dim sunlight (14W/m^2), and then adds thick haze. However, it is probably better lit than Earth under a full moon, so there was enough light for landscape photos. Huygens used lamps on the ground because it provided light of known power and color, which was useful for certain scientific measurements. Mike Miller |
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rnesto wrote:
Sunshine on Titan has to be 1/100 of that we have on Earth, because Titan is 10 time farer than us from the Sun. So, the Huyghen after landing get on a light to get pictures. But how Huyghens could take landscape pictures? Perhaps a more sensitive camera, or longer exposure times, or maybe both. rick jones -- The glass is neither half-empty nor half-full. The glass has a leak. The real question is "Can it be patched?" these opinions are mine, all mine; HP might not want them anyway... ![]() feel free to post, OR email to raj in cup.hp.com but NOT BOTH... |
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" wrote:
rnesto wrote: But how Huyghens could take landscape pictures? You said that Saturn has 1/100th the sunlight that Earth does, which is correct. However, let me say that another way: "At Saturn's orbit, there is about 14 watts per square meter." Some comparisons: If you put a single 100-watt lightbulb in a 3m x 3m room (a bedroom), you would have 11.1 watts per square meter. At night, you would probably think that the bedroom was brightly lit. The light of a full moon on Earth is enough for careful landscape photography. When your eyes adapt to full moonlight, it can even seem bright. But it is only .001 watts per square meter. Titan starts off with dim sunlight (14W/m^2), and then adds thick haze. However, it is probably better lit than Earth under a full moon, so there was enough light for landscape photos. Huygens used lamps on the ground because it provided light of known power and color, which was useful for certain scientific measurements. Mike Miller Thank you very much! other questions: with 14W/m^2 and a thick atmosphere don't you think the temperature on Titan has to be a little more higher that -180 degrees? Do you know if Saturn were in the Titan sky during the Huygens landing? And if yes, how much light it added to which of the Sun? And the night on Titan with Saturn in the Sky, how many watts arrive on the Titan surface? Thank you for your attention. Ciao Ernesto |
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On Tue, 01 Mar 2005 19:03:59 GMT
(rnesto) wrote: with 14W/m^2 and a thick atmosphere don't you think the temperature on Titan has to be a little more higher that -180 degrees? No, it sounds about right to me. But I bet if Titan had some heat generating industry it would be a lot warmer. -180 degrees is better expressed as 90 kelvin. About half the coldest temperature ever seen in Antarctica. -- Michael Smith Network Applications www.netapps.com.au | +61 (0) 416 062 898 Web Hosting | Internet Services |
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![]() Dr John Stockton wrote: That's not light, that's total radiative energy. A significant proportion will be above or below visible frequencies. Sure. I was just setting a high mark. Because... The true figure is nearer 1 watt of light, though I don't recall exactly. ...in this case, using the higher value was being conservative. If a 100W light bulb generated less visible light per square meter than my upper bound estimate, then a 'common real world' lighting environment is even closer to Titan. Mike Miller |
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Rick Jones wrote:
rnesto wrote: Sunshine on Titan has to be 1/100 of that we have on Earth, because Titan is 10 time farer than us from the Sun. So, the Huyghen after landing get on a light to get pictures. But how Huyghens could take landscape pictures? Perhaps a more sensitive camera, or longer exposure times, or maybe both. Sunshine on Tital woul be 1/100 with a sky without clouds. With the tick clouds I think on Titan there is just 1/10000 of our terrestrial sunshine. Anyone could answer to these questions? Which hour was, in the Titan day, when Huygens took its pictures? Where was Saturn, in the Titan sky, in those hours? Is it possible to see Saturn from the Titan surface, even when it's in its sky? Thank you. ÿóÿý |
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(rnesto) writes:
Rick Jones wrote: rnesto wrote: Sunshine on Titan has to be 1/100 of that we have on Earth, because Titan is 10 time farer than us from the Sun. So, the Huyghen after landing get on a light to get pictures. But how Huyghens could take landscape pictures? Perhaps a more sensitive camera, or longer exposure times, or maybe both. Sunshine on Tital woul be 1/100 with a sky without clouds. With the tick clouds I think on Titan there is just 1/10000 of our terrestrial sunshine. That assumes the clouds block 99% of incoming sunlight. I have no idea what the actual figure is, but my wild guess is that more gets through than that. Even assuming 99% blockage, it would still be about 40 times as bright as full moonlight on Earth. That should be more than enough to take pictures. (One reference says it was like photographing asphalt at dusk.) Anyone could answer to these questions? Which hour was, in the Titan day, when Huygens took its pictures? Where was Saturn, in the Titan sky, in those hours? I have no idea -- but since Titan's rotation is synchronous, the position of Saturn in its sky doesn't depend significantly on the time of day. (A "day" on Titan is just under 16 Earth days.) Is it possible to see Saturn from the Titan surface, even when it's in its sky? The view of Saturn from Titan's surface (in visible light) should be about as good as the view of Titan's surface from above its atmosphere -- i.e., essentially none. -- Keith Thompson (The_Other_Keith) http://www.ghoti.net/~kst San Diego Supercomputer Center * http://users.sdsc.edu/~kst We must do something. This is something. Therefore, we must do this. |
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