Scott Miller

Appsguild - Software craftsmanship, project management, and the biz of software

  Home  |   Contact  |   Syndication    |   Login
  136 Posts | 3 Stories | 181 Comments | 69 Trackbacks

News



Article Categories

Archives

Image Galleries

Best Blogs

Podcasts

Scott's links

My summer astronomy continues. Although a cold front and the remnants of Gustav are making it cloudy for the next few days, last night was pretty good, even from my backyard in the city.

I spent about an hour watching the shadow of a Jovian moon traverse across the face of Jupiter. A moon will look like a star next to Jupiter until it crosses in front of it, whereas you can see the shadow on the face of Jupiter.

According to this Javascript utility on Sky and Telescope's website (with a good article), what I saw was the moon Europa. I couldn't see the moon itself against the disk of Jupiter, but I could see its trailing shadow:

I also used this ancient Java-web-based Jupiter moon calculator from 1997:

  • Share This Post:
  • Share on Twitter
  • Share on Facebook
  • Share on Technorati
posted on Tuesday, September 02, 2008 9:53 PM

Feedback

# re: Jupiter moon Europa 09/01/2008 12/3/2008 5:17 PM Richard Greenberg
For more info on Europa, see my new book "Unmasking Europa: The Search for Life on Jupiter's Ocean Moon", by Richard Greenberg, 2008, Springer/Copernicus Books.

Post A Comment
Title:
Name:
Email:
Website:
Comment:
Verification: