Each day a different image or photograph of our fascinating universe is featured, along with a brief explanation written by a professional astronomer.
Explanation: This webcam and telescope image of banded gas
giant Jupiter shows the transit of three shadows cast by Jupiter's moons in
progress, captured in Belgian skies on October 12 at 0528 UT. Such a three
shadow transit is a relatively rare event, even for a large planet with many moons. Visible in
the frame are the three Galilean moons responsible, Callisto at the far left edge, Io closest to Jupiter's disk, and Europa below and just left of Io. Of
their shadows on the sunlit Jovian
cloud tops, Callisto casts
the most elongated one near the planet's south polar region at the bottom. Io's
shadow is above and right of Jupiter's Great Red Spot. Of course viewed from
Jupiter's perspective, these shadow crossings could be seen as solar eclipses,
analogous to the Moon's shadow crossing
the sunlit face of planet Earth.
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