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Smudge
on the Sky - The Gegenschein Imaged by Rob Ratkowski (photography)
on October 14, 2007 under clear dark skies in Hawaii. The gegenschein,
the faint elongated smudge against the stars, is produced by a disk
of interplanetary dust grains probably extending outwards to the orbit
of Jupiter. The grains scatter sunlight in all directions but more
strongly directly backwards. The gegenschein or counter glow, opposite
the position of the sun in the sky, is the result.
The gegenschein is visible to
the unaided eye on the darkest clearest nights well away from light
pollution. This image conveys its appearance to well dark adapted eyes. "The
guesstimated diameter of the gegenschein is between 6 and 10 degrees. I
really didn't make a angular determination, it was hard enough to se
it. Averted vision brought it out but didn't
allow for any real examination of detail, it was there but seemed to
blend in with the starfield then pop out and then fade. Elusive but
there."
Image ©Rob
Ratkowski, shown with permission. |