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Rocket Transits Rippling Sun

Rocket Transits Rippling Sun

Copyright: Michael Cain

The launch of a rocket at sunrise can result in unusual but intriguing images that feature both the rocket and the Sun. Such was the case last month when a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket blasted off from NASA’s Kennedy Space Center carrying 53 more Starlink satellites into low Earth orbit. In the featured launch picture, the rocket’s exhaust plume glows beyond its projection onto the distant Sun, the rocket itself appears oddly jagged, and the Sun’s lower edge shows peculiar drip-like ripples. The physical cause of all of these effects is pockets of relatively hot or rarefied air deflecting sunlight less strongly than pockets relatively cool or compressed air: refraction. Unaware of the Earthly show, active sunspot region 3014 — on the upper left — slowly crosses the Sun.

Courtesy of NASA Astronomy Picture of the Day

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Cliff
Cliff
1 year ago

What was the cameras settings, time, filter pack?

Ken & Judy O
Ken & Judy O' Neill
1 year ago

SpaceX does it again is there nothing SpaceX cannot do.?
Harpooning the sun what next.?