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If we look from Earth with the naked eye at Mars, many may say that it
appears to be a red color. After all, it is known as the “red planet”. Well, the
truth is that Mars does not actually look red from down here on Earth. It
appears as a brownish, tan color. Mars really is reflecting a lot of red
spectrum light, and red, being a longer wavelength than blue, eats through the
atmospheric distortion and is less scattered than the shorter wavelengths are.
Therefore, a good deal of that red actually reaches our eyes on Earth, and the
filtering effects of the atmosphere do not cancel the red entirely. After that
red is filtered through our atmosphere, what color information that manages to
fight it’s way through leaves Mars with the tan coloured planet we see from
Earth.
Now, there are times when Mars can indeed appear red, or redder, to the naked
eye from Earth. Depending on the atmospheric conditions and just where Mars lies
in relation to the earth’s horizon when it is being viewed, those tan Martian
colors we see on Earth can be amplified to appear far deeper than they actually
are. After all, sometimes the Moon looks red from Earth, all depending upon the
atmospheric “seeing” conditions!
SAMPLE
This known ability of the atmosphere to alter the color of celestial objects
is something that is VERY important and is often overlooked by the public when
considering the true naked eye color of Mars or other planets, as seen from
Earth.
This is likewise the case for Jupiter, another common telescopic target. When
talking about determining color of a celestial object through telescopic
observations, remember that we are talking about naked-eye observations through
the eyepiece of an unfiltered (or limited filtered) telescope system, with no
frame-stacking, no color filters or color-channel shifting enhancements. Now,
through a small unfiltered telescope, you are not going to see any true color
characteristics if you look at Jupiter. You are going to see a high-albedo
bright dot, depending on atmospheric seeing conditions, as well as some smaller
dots that are Jupiter‘s largest Moons.
SAMPLE
Here is a great color telescopic shot of the limb of the Moon with Saturn
beyond it. You can see that this is a color image, but Saturn’s color doesn’t
exactly leap out at you, does it? Much of it’s color is not readily detectable
without filters or enhancements to color.
SAMPLE
See much color in Saturn here? I don’t! This is Saturn at 250x magnification
from Earth. SAMPLE
There are telescopic views of Jupiter from Earth for example where we can see
a feature known as the “Great Red Spot”. Here is a Voyager image of the Great Red Spot
And here is a telescopic view from Earth of Jupiter, where you can see the
Great Red Spot shows to be brown here. SAMPLE
The Great Red Spot is visible during last half of
clip - but it is not red, it is tan, because the red of the spot has been
atmospherically filtered and looks brown from Earth. The same goes for the deep
browns of the stripes on Jupiter, that appear far less vibrant and more tan than
they really are, after our atmosphere has filtered some of the color out.
Just to highlight how prevalent the use of modern technology is in celestial
planet-gazing nowadays, here is an interesting example.
This is the “MarsWatch” website,
where amateur astronomers around the world can submit their telescopic images of
Mars. There are pages and pages of these on this site alone, and you can see
that virtually all of these telescopic images have been “frame-stacked” and
color-filtered by the astronomer who took them. Trying to find real “true” color
images ofMars that have any detail at all that have not been filtered is VERY
hard to do. All the big observatories typically filter, and just about every
amateur with a telescope large enough and the gear to image the eyepiece stack
their footage to create enhanced stills, and they use filters to help highlight
surface colors.
Here is a “Mars Filter” for a telescope that many astronomers use for
example, because it enhances the contrast of that planet’s browns (like
sunglasses can!) All this alters the true color as seen from Earth by the naked
eye!
Here is another example of a series of Jupiter images. Note the
frame-stacking and coloring enhancements admitted to. SAMPLE
Jupiter again, notice the color correction this image went through. SAMPLE
Trying to find unstacked, unfiltered views of planets through telescopes is
very hard, because they need filters to eat through the bright albedo and make
out details. many in the public do not realize that the amateur telescope images
they see on the internet are typically stacked and color corrected/filtered to
make for the best detail, not for the most accurate color representation!
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