Phases of Venus

Photographer: Stephane Gonzales
Country: France

Earning first place in the Still images of phases of Venus category is this mesmerising series of images captured from Surgères, Charente-Maritime, France, over a period of six months in 2015. The phases appear similar to the phases we see of our own Moon and occur for similar reasons. Only half of Venus is illuminated by the Sun and, from Earth, we can sometimes only see part of that illuminated half, depending on the relative positions of the Sun, Earth and Venus. Both Mercury and Venus exhibit phases because their orbit is between the Sun and the orbit of Earth. Depending on the position of Venus relative to the Sun and Earth, Venus goes through its phases over a period of time. This sequence of images beautifully showcases the transition from the ‘gibbous’ to the slender crescents. The use of infrared filters helped to capture Venus's dense perpetual cloud cover during daylight in sharp detail, providing a glimpse into the mysterious nature of the planet’s atmosphere.

 Also see image in Zenodo: https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.10278493 

Credit:

Stephane Gonzales/IAU OAE (CC BY 4.0)

About the Image

Id:
ann23043a
Type:
Photographic
Release date:
18 December 2023, 17:30
Related announcements:
ann23043
Size:
5000 x 3848 px
Image Use

About the Object

Type:
Solar System : Planet

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