The sun is lovely and on other planets.
The sun, without which we cannot imagine life on our planet. We all love to remember gorgeous sunsets and sunrises, from which it was impossible to put down. But can we imagine what it looks like a heavenly body on other planets? Digital illustration, created by Ron Miller (Ron Miller), who has spent decades portraying outer space, help us in this.
Mercury
Mercury far from the Sun is 60 million km, which Is 39% of the distance from the earth to the Sun. And sunrise on mercury is 3 times brighter than on Earth.
Venus
The sun, which “almost” seen from Venus, is at a distance of 108 million km (72% of the distance from the earth to the Sun). Because of the thick gas clouds it is there like a stain on a cloudy day.
Mars
From the red planet the Sun is at a distance of 230 million km, and is 1.5 times greater than the distance between the Sun and Earth. But to see it is not a distance, and the dusty wind that rises to the atmosphere.
Jupiter
Looks like the Sun from the surface of Europa, one of Jupiter’s moons. Jupiter is farther: the distance is 779 million km (5.2 times the distance from Earth to the Sun). Sunlight passing through the atmosphere, lights it with a ring of red light.
Saturn
Saturn is perhaps one of the most recognizable planets. The sun from Saturn shared by 1.5 billion km (distance is 9.5 times more than between earth and the Sun), but the star shines no less brightly. Rays of crystals of water and gas are refracted, creating incredible optical effects such as halos and sundogs.
Uranium
On Ariel, one of the moons of Uranus, cold, but spectacular sunrises. The sun is almost warm, after all, is at a distance of nearly 2.8 billion km, which is 19 times greater than the distance between the earth and the Sun.
Neptune
The sun as it is on Triton one of the moons of Neptune. The distance between them is 4.5 billion km (that is, 30 times more than that between the Earth and the Sun). Huge geysers of dust and gas obscures the already tiny star.
Pluto
A small shining point, so it looks like the Sun to the farthest planet. Distance from Pluto to the Sun is 6 billion km (40 times the distance from Earth to the Sun). Light on Pluto 1600 times dimmer than on Earth, but still 250 times brighter than light from a full moon on Earth.