Our beautiful Solar System is a seriously
beautiful place. Whether it’s the pockmarked massive volcanic surface of Mercury, the
dusty crimson plains of Mars, the beautiful rings of Saturn, or even the blues
and viridians of our own world, it’s a diverse place full of remarkable sights
and natural wonders.
We’d be nowhere without the
Sun, mind you, and a series of truly stunning visualizations of our local star
– as seen from each planet, and poor demoted Pluto – by artist and illustrator
Ron Miller serve to remind you of this fact. He’s spent more than 40 years
illustrating the dark realms of space, both near and far, and has come up with
the most realistic depictions of the Sun as seen from these far-flung worlds as
possible.
“I've taken care in not only
making sure the Sun is depicted realistically, but also the surfaces of the
planets and satellites as well,” Miller told IFLScience.
“While the Sun is smaller,
it is still an immensely brilliant source of light,” Miller added. “The light
levels on the surfaces around you [on Pluto] would be dusk-like, but the sun
itself would still be a very bright object – just a small one.”
Thanks to the laws of
physics, the brightness of the Sun is equivalent to the square of the relative
distance from it. So if you are now half as close to the Sun as you originally
were, the apparent brightness would be a quarter of what it originally was.
(1/2)2 = 1/4, see?
This means that the
brightness of the Sun drops off dramatically the further away you get from the
Sun. The fact that even by the time you get to Pluto it’s still bright is a
remarkable testament to the sheer power of our nearest thermonuclear stellar
furnace.
Mercury, which is 58 million kilometers (36 million
miles) from the Sun
|
Venus, which is 108 million kilometers (67 million miles)
from the Sun. As depicted here, the planet is covered in pancake volcanism and
a suffocating, carbon dioxide-rich atmosphere
|
Earth, which is 150 million kilometers (93 million miles)
from the Sun. If you've ever seen a solar eclipse, this sight will be very
familiar to you
|
Mars, which is 228 million kilometers (142 million miles)
from the Sun
|
Jupiter (seen from the moon of Europa), which is 779
million kilometers (484 million miles) from the Sun
|
Saturn, which is 1.43 billion kilometers (889 million
miles) from the Sun
|
Uranus (seen from the moon of Ariel) which is 2.88
billion kilometers (1.79 billion miles) from the Sun
|
Neptune (seen from the moon of Triton), which is 4.5
billion kilometers (2.8 billion miles) from the Sun. Cryovolcanic geysers cloud
the horizon
|
Pluto, which has a highly elliptical orbit, is an average
of 5.91 billion kilometers (3.67 billion miles) from the Sun
|
amazing... i always wondered what the rings around saturn looked like from the surface of the planet.
ReplyDelete