Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The Earth appears in the Moon's sky with an apparent size of 1° 48 ′ to 2°, [296] three to four times the size of the Moon or Sun in Earth's sky, or about the apparent width of two little fingers at an arm's length away.
The size of solid bodies does not include an object's atmosphere. For example, Titan looks bigger than Ganymede, but its solid body is smaller. For the giant planets , the "radius" is defined as the distance from the center at which the atmosphere reaches 1 bar of atmospheric pressure.
Europa is slightly smaller than the Earth's moon. At just over 3,100 kilometres (1,900 mi) in diameter , it is the sixth-largest moon and fifteenth-largest object in the Solar System . Though by a wide margin the least massive of the Galilean satellites, it is nonetheless more massive than all known moons in the Solar System smaller than itself ...
It is slightly more massive than the second most massive moon, Saturn's satellite Titan, and is more than twice as massive as the Earth's Moon. It is larger than the planet Mercury, which has a diameter of 4,880 kilometres (3,030 mi) but is only 45 percent of Mercury's mass. Ganymede is the ninth-largest object in the solar system, but the ...
To put this in perspective, the full Moon as viewed from Earth is about 1 ⁄ 2 °, or 30 ′ (or 1800″). The Moon's motion across the sky can be measured in angular size: approximately 15° every hour, or 15″ per second. A one-mile-long line painted on the face of the Moon would appear from Earth to be about 1″ in length.
The Earth seen from Apollo 17.jpg FullMoon2010.jpg Ganymede, moon of Jupiter, NASA.jpg: Author: Apollo 17 Picture of the Whole Earth: NASA. Telescopic Image of the Full Moon: Gregory H. Revera Computer-enhanced image of Ganymede: NASA/JPL/DLR
The Earth seen from Apollo 17.jpg FullMoon2010.jpg Callisto.jpg: Author: Apollo 17 Picture of the Whole Earth: NASA. Telescopic Image of the Full Moon: Gregory H. Revera Global View of Callisto: NASA/JPL/DLR (German Aerospace Center)
Use of NASA logos, insignia and emblems is restricted per U.S. law 14 CFR 1221.; The NASA website hosts a large number of images from the Soviet/Russian space agency, and other non-American space agencies.