Jupiter by Moonlight
Image Credit &
Copyright:
Giorgia Hofer
That bright beacon you've seen
rising in the
east just after sunset is Jupiter.
Climbing high in midnight skies, our Solar System's
ruling gas giant
was at its 2023 opposition,
opposite the Sun in planet Earth's sky, on November 2.
But only a few days earlier, on October 28, the Moon was at its own
opposition.
Then both Full Moon and Jupiter
could share this telephoto field of view.
The celestial scene is composed from two exposures,
one long and one short,
blended to record bright planet
and even brighter Moon during that evening's
partial lunar eclipse.
Moonlight shining through the thin,
high clouds over northern Italy creates the
colorful iridescence
and
lunar corona.
Look closely and you'll also spot some of Jupiter's
Galilean moons.