The Entire Solar System Is Simultaneously Visible From Earth
Recent imagery from the American space agency NASA shows the entire solar system as seen from Earth at once, which is an uncommon occurrence. Mercury, Venus, Mars, Jupiter, and Saturn can all be seen during the ‘Planet Parade’ occurrence. An astronomy event known as a planet parade occurs when many planets may be seen in the sky with the unaided eye.
Astronomy Picture of the Day (APOD) featured the scene, according to NASA. A broad variety of planets, including Jupiter, Mars, Venus, Saturn, and Mercury, can be seen dazzling against a purple sky in the late evening in the “After Sunset Planet Parade” image published on January 2.
As internet users admired the brilliant dusktime view, the picture rapidly went viral and included Mars, Uranus, Jupiter, Neptune, Saturn, Mercury, and Venus in one frame. The photo, which was taken in December 2022 by astronomer and photographer Tunc Tezel, also included prominent stars including Altair, Fomalhaut, and Aldebaran.
NASA’s APOD tradition dates back decades and involves posting a fresh image related to astronomy every day. A new photograph and a brief explanation written by a qualified astronomer are posted every day, offering the ideal balance of educational and entertaining content.
The renowned “pale blue dot,” also known as the biggest rock in our solar system, was seen in APOD’s first image of 2023 via a photograph acquired by NASA’s Voyager 1 spacecraft in 1990.
Photographer Tommy Lease captured the breathtaking asterism Kemble’s Cascade of Stars (a group of stars different from a constellation) in his latest image. Discover the Cosmos, APOD’s tagline, promises that every day is a fresh exploration of the enormous, complex world in which we live.
News Mania Desk