Abstract: At Jupiter's orbit the light from our Sun is so spread out that it illuminates with a mere one twenty-seventh of its strength at the orbit of our Earth. Of course, even that is nowhere near the outer limits of our Solar System. There are still three mighty worlds and a vast number of very much smaller bodies orbiting much further out where the sunlight is even dimmer. The next major planet is Saturn, where sunlight shines a mere one ninetieth of the brightness we are used to. Beyond that is Uranus and beyond that is Neptune. From these worlds our Sun has very roughly one four hundredth and one nine hundredth of its intensity, respectively. Their great distances also mean that the time light takes to cross from the planet to us is significant, despite the fact that a pulse of light travels three hundred thousand kilometres every second. Whenever we look at Saturn we are actually seeing it as it used to be just over an hour before. Make that two and a half hours in the case of Uranus and fully four hours in the case of Neptune! It is little wonder that these twilit worlds appear wonderfully unearthly and ethereal through our telescopes. In this chapter we will consider each major planet in turn along with what observations we can usefully make of them.
Publication Year: 2012
Publication Date: 2012-10-25
Language: en
Type: book-chapter
Indexed In: ['crossref']
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Cited By Count: 2
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