Astrophoto: The Distant Worlds of Uranus and Neptune by Rolf Wahl Olsen

by dianne on October 9, 2011

Astrophoto: The Distant Worlds of Uranus and Neptune by Rolf Wahl Olsen

The Distant Worlds of Uranus and Neptune. Credit: Rolf Wahl Olsen


Rolf Wahl Olsen captured this photo of the Uranus and Neptune system on October 3, 2011. Uranus and Neptune are currently the two farthest planets from the Sun after Pluto was demoted to a dwarf planet.

“The image was taken with my 10″ f/5 Serrurier truss Newtonian and is a composite of short exposures for the planet discs and longer exposures for the fainter moons. Miranda, the smallest of Uranus’ five larger moons, was very close to Uranus when the image was taken and therefore lost in the glare of the planet itself in the long exposure image used to capture the moons. The orbits of the moons were added to illustrate the scale and orientation of the two systems as viewed from Earth, with South being towards the top of the image.

Both Uranus and Neptune are so far away from us that their angular diameters are only a few arcseconds, being 3.7″ and 2.3″ respectively. This makes it extremely difficult to discern any details on then and they nearly always appear as tiny cyan/blue balls except when imaged by large observatories or the Hubble Space Telescope. In fact, the entire orbit of Triton would easily fit behind the disc of Mars when the latter is at opposition. Still, with relatively modest equipment it is possible to get a good glimpse of these fascinating icy worlds.”

For more photos, check out Rolf’s astrophoto site.

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  • Anonymous

    When first viewing the image, I thought, What a nice graphic. Then, I read the text.
    Beautiful images of elegant frame.The lightly traced orbit paths really enhance this dual presentation.

  • Anonymous

    These are impressive images for a 10 inch telescope and a bit of commercially available software:). Great job.

  • laurele

    These are beautiful photos, but Uranus and Neptune are not the furthest planets from the Sun. The controversial demotion of Pluto by four percent of the IAU should not be depicted as fact but as what it really is–just one interpretation in an ongoing debate. Hundreds of professional astronomers rejected the demotion of Pluto in a formal petition led by New Horizons Principal Investigator Dr. Alan Stern. Stern is the person who coined the term “dwarf planet,” and he intended it to refer to a third class of planets in addition to terrestrials and jovians, small planets large enough to be rounded by their own gravity but not large enough to gravitationally dominate their orbits. He never intended for dwarf planets to not be considered planets at all. Those of us who hold to the geophysical planet definition view dwarf planets as a subclass of planets; therefore, the furthest planets from the Sun are either Eris or Sedna.

    • IVAN3MAN_AT_LARGE

      “Aye, and if my grandmother had wheels, she’d be a wagon!”
      —Montgomery Scott, Star Trek III: The Search for Spock.

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