Astronomy Picture of the Day |
APOD: 1999 January 2 - Mercury: A Cratered Inferno
Explanation:
Mercury's surface looks similar to our Moon's. Each is heavily
cratered and made of rock.
Mercury's diameter is about 4800 km, while the
Moon's is slightly less at about 3500 km (compared with about 12,700 km for the
Earth). But
Mercury is unique in many ways.
Mercury is the closest planet to the
Sun, orbiting at about 1/3 the radius of the
Earth's orbit. As
Mercury slowly rotates, its surface temperature varies from an unbearably cold -180 degrees
Celsius to an unbearably hot 400 degrees
Celsius. The place nearest the
Sun in
Mercury's orbit changes slightly each orbit - a fact used by
Albert Einstein to help verify the correctness of his then newly discovered theory of gravity:
General Relativity.
The above picture was taken by the only spacecraft ever to pass
Mercury:
Mariner 10 in 1974.
APOD: 1997 September 13 - Southwest Mercury
Explanation:
The planet Mercury resembles a moon.
Mercury's
old surface is heavily
cratered like many moons.
Mercury is larger than most moons but smaller than
Jupiter's moon
Ganymede and
Saturn's moon
Titan. Mercury is much denser and more massive than any moon, though, because it is made mostly of iron. In fact, the
Earth is the only planet more dense. A visitor to
Mercury's surface would see some strange sights. Because
Mercuryrotates exactly three times every two orbits around the
Sun, and because
Mercury's orbit is so elliptical, a visitor to
Mercury might see the
Sun rise, stop in the sky, go back toward the rising
horizon, stop again, and then set quickly over the other horizon. From
Earth, Mercury's proximity to the
Sun cause it to be
visible only for a short time just after sunset or just before sunrise.
APOD: 1999 November 19 - Mercury and the Sun
Explanation:
Just days before the peak of the
Leonid meteor shower,
skywatchers were offered another astronomical treat as
planet Mercury crossed the face of the Sun on November 15.
Viewed from planet Earth, a
transit of Mercury is not all that rare.
The last
occurred in 1993 and the next will happen in 2003.
Enjoying a mercurial transit does require an
appropriately filtered telescope,
still the event can be dramatic
as the diminutive well-done world
drifts past the dominating solar disk.
This slow loading gif
animation is based on images
recorded by the earth-orbiting
TRACE satellite.
The false-color TRACE images were made in ultraviolet light
and tend to show the hot gas just above the Sun's visible surface.
Mercury's disk is silhouetted against the
seething plasma as it follows a trajectory near the edge of the Sun.
Authors & editors:
Robert
Nemiroff
(MTU)
& Jerry Bonnell (USRA)
NASA Technical Rep.:
Jay Norris.
Specific rights apply.
A service of:
LHEA at
NASA/
GSFC
&
Michigan Tech. U.