Starlight
Pictures of the day - December 19, 2018
Insight A-IV is the fourth and largest planet orbiting Insight A. It is a large ice giant planet with a mass 41.38 times that of Earth and a diameter of 4.41 Earths. The planet has a hot atmosphere with a temperature of 297 F, which is dominated by hydrogen and helium. Additionally, a single large moon orbits the planet alongside 13 smaller asteroid-like satellites.
The planet orbits it’s sun at an average distance of 0.36 AU, completing an orbit once every 72.17 Earth Days. The planet is not tidally locked, but has a slow rotational rate of 288.70 Earth days, resulting in solar days that last 96.23 Earth days.
Insight A-IV
Stormy North Pole
Setting Sun
Crescents
View from the moon
First post of the Insight System.
The Insight system (named after the newest Mars lander) is a wide-spaced binary system consisting of a yellow G1V type star (Insight A) and a dimmer orange K5V type star (Insight B), that orbit each other in an elliptical orbit at an average distance of 192.3 AU. Both stars complete 1 orbit around each other every 2,432 years.
Insight A is 1.6 times brighter than our sun, and Insight B is only 1/6th the brightness of our sun.
Both stars have their own solar systems.
My first post if of the 6 planets orbiting the dimmer star Insight B.
First Planet Insight B-I (1.1 Earth masses)
Second Planet Insight B-II (5.3 Earth Masses)
Third Planet Insight B-III (11.7 Jupiter Masses)
Fourth Planet Insight B-IV (0.20 Jupiter Masses)
Fifth Planet Insight B-V (0.27 Earth masses)
Outer-most planet Insight B-VI (1.42 Jupiter Masses)
More pictures to come soon.
Picture of the day - November 29, 2018
Its been a while since I showcased an entire star system on here, so the next several sets of pictures will be all the planets in this one system that I am going to name the “Insight System” after the newest Mars lander. Many more picture to come.
Above is a preview pic of the system. This is a binary system, so the planet’s night sides are all faintly illuminated.
Pictures of the day - December 2, 2018
Insight B-III is the giant of the Insight System, being the most massive planet of both of the system’s stars. It is a massive gas giant the nears the boundary with a brown dwarf at 11.75 Jupiter masses. The planet has an active atmosphere from both solar heating and internally released heat and has an average atmospheric temperature of 147 F.
The planet orbits the sun at an average distance of 0.21 AU, and completes an orbit once every 41.33 days. The planet is not quite tidally locked with a rotational rate of 41.67 days vs its orbital period of 41.33 days. As a result, a solar day on the planet lasts 14.00 Earth years.
No major satellites orbit the planet; however, 30 asteroid-like irregular satellites orbit the planet.
Note the star visible in the last picture is the Insight System’s primary star Insight A. Viewed from the gas giant, the star shines with an average magnitude of -17.29, bright enough that it illuminates the dark side of objects to approximately the same level of lighting as the average living room.
Insight B-III
Polar View
Crescent View
Equatorial Cloud Bands
Nearby asteroid moon
Distant asteroid moon
Picture of the Day - February 2, 2019 - (Very Late Post)
The core of a galaxy.
The shadow of a moon's eclipse is visible across this gas giant’s rings.
Edited screenshot I took of a gas giant from the simulator “Space Engine” [3089x2980]
Picture of the day - December 10, 2018
The cracked surface of Insight B-VI’s fourth moon.
New pics of the Insight A system coming soon.
Picture of the Day 2 - November 9, 2018
Narrow sea cuts through the forests of a life supporting world with red-colored vegetation.
My Space Engine Adventures, also any space related topic or news. www.spaceengine.org to download space engine. The game is free by the way. Please feel free to ask me anything, provide suggestions on systems to visit or post any space related topic.Check out my other blog https://bunsandsharks.tumblr.com for rabbit and shark blog.
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