[{WikipediaArticle oldid='200536221'}] [{VerifyArticle user='grath' template='Standard' date='23. Juni 2013' page-date='2013' comment='Einführungsartikel.' }] [{ALLOW edit Admin}][{ALLOW view All}][{ALLOW comment All}][{ALLOW verify grath}] ---- Siehe dazu auch den Artikel ueber die oesterreichische Geschichte der Astronomie [AEIOU/Astronomie] -- [Maurer Hermann|User/mahlknecht sara], Mittwoch, 26. Juni 2013, 21:34 %%information %%(font-size: 80%;) !!!License Information of Images on page ||Image Description||Credit||Artist||License Name||File | The Wikimedia Commons logo, SVG version.| Original created by Reidab ( PNG version ) SVG version was created by Grunt and cleaned up by 3247 . Re-creation with SVG geometry features by Pumbaa , using a proper partial circle and SVG geometry features. (Former versions used to be slightly warped.)| Reidab , Grunt , 3247 , Pumbaa| [{Image src='https://www.austria-forum.org/cc/images/slim/by-sa.png' alt='CC BY-SA 3.0' align='center' link='https://www.austria-forum.org/cc/by-sa-30.html' target='_blank'}]| Datei:Commons-logo.svg | Sunset at the equinox days from the site of Pizzo Vento, Fondachelli Fantina, Sicily| Eigenes Werk| Girtompir| [{Image src='https://www.austria-forum.org/cc/images/slim/cc-zero.png' alt='CC0' align='center' link='https://www.austria-forum.org/cc/cc0-10.html' target='_blank'}]| Datei:Equinozio da Pizzo Vento,tramonto fondachelli fantina, sicilia.JPG | The Flammarion engraving is a wood engraving by an unknown artist that first appeared in Camille Flammarion 's L'Atmosphère: Météorologie populaire (1888). The image depicts a man crawling under the edge of the sky, depicted as if it were a solid hemisphere, to look at the mysterious Empyrean beyond. The caption underneath the engraving (not shown here) translates to "A medieval missionary tells that he has found the point where heaven and Earth meet..."| Camille Flammarion , L'Atmosphère: Météorologie Populaire (Paris, 1888), pp. 163 .| Anonym Unknown author| [{Image src='https://www.austria-forum.org/cc/images/slim/publicdomain.png' alt='Public domain' align='center' link='https://www.austria-forum.org/cc/public-domain-10.html' target='_blank'}]| Datei:Flammarion.jpg | From left to right, the Carlsberg Meridian Telescope , William Herschel Telescope , Dutch Open Telescope , the Mercator Telescope , the Swedish Solar Telescope , the Isaac Newton Telescope (second from right) and the Jacobus Kapteyn Telescope (far right) at Roque de los Muchachos Observatory on La Palma| Eigenes Werk| Bob Tubbs| [{Image src='https://www.austria-forum.org/cc/images/slim/publicdomain.png' alt='Public domain' align='center' link='https://www.austria-forum.org/cc/public-domain-10.html' target='_blank'}]| Datei:Ing telescopes sunset la palma july 2001.jpg | Logarithmische Konzeption des beobachtbaren Universums mit dem Sonnensystem im Zentrum, inneren und äußeren Planeten, Kuipergürtelobjekten, Alpha Centauri, Perseus Arm, Milchstraßengalaxie, Andromeda-Galaxie, nahe gelegenen Galaxien, kosmischem Netz, kosmischer Mikrowellenstrahlung und unsichtbarem Urknall Plasma am Rand. Die Entfernung von der Erde nimmt vom Zentrum bis zum Rand exponentiell zu. Himmelskörper sind vergrößert dargestellt, um ihre Formen zu erkennen.| Eigenes Werk| Pablo Carlos Budassi| [{Image src='https://www.austria-forum.org/cc/images/slim/by-sa.png' alt='CC BY-SA 4.0' align='center' link='https://www.austria-forum.org/cc/by-sa-40.html' target='_blank'}]| Datei:Observable Universe German Annotations.png | Icon for Wikimedia project ´s portals .| File:Portal.svg| File:Portal.svg : Pepetps / *abgeleitetes Werk Bitplane| [{Image src='https://www.austria-forum.org/cc/images/slim/by.png' alt='CC BY 2.5' align='center' link='https://www.austria-forum.org/cc/by-25.html' target='_blank'}]| Datei:Portal.svg | Bewertungsicon "Quelle" für Artikel mit fehlenden Quellen.| based on Image:Qsicon_Quelle.png and Image:QS icon template.svg| Hk kng , Image:Qsicon_Quelle.png is by User:San Jose , Image:QS icon template.svg is by User:JesperZedlitz| [{Image src='https://www.austria-forum.org/cc/images/slim/by.png' alt='CC BY 3.0' align='center' link='https://www.austria-forum.org/cc/by-30.html' target='_blank'}]| Datei:Qsicon Quelle.svg | The planetary nebula Messier 57 , also known as the Ring Nebula , in the constellation Lyra (NGC 6720, GC 4447).| Diese Datei ist ein Ausschnitt aus einer anderen Datei| The Hubble Heritage Team (AURA/STScI/NASA)| [{Image src='https://www.austria-forum.org/cc/images/slim/publicdomain.png' alt='Public domain' align='center' link='https://www.austria-forum.org/cc/public-domain-10.html' target='_blank'}]| Datei:Ring Nebula.jpg | Wikibooks logo; Favicon is| Eigenes Werk| Bastique , Ramac et al.| [{Image src='https://www.austria-forum.org/cc/images/slim/by-sa.png' alt='CC BY-SA 3.0' align='center' link='https://www.austria-forum.org/cc/by-sa-30.html' target='_blank'}]| Datei:Wikibooks-logo.svg | While cruising around Saturn in early October 2004, Cassini captured a series of images that have been composed into the largest, most detailed, global natural color view of Saturn and its rings ever made. This grand mosaic consists of 126 images acquired in a tile-like fashion, covering one end of Saturn's rings to the other and the entire planet in between. The images were taken over the course of two hours on Oct. 6, 2004, while Cassini was approximately 6.3 million kilometers (3.9 million miles) from Saturn. Since the view seen by Cassini during this time changed very little, no re-projection or alteration of any of the images was necessary. Three images (red, green and blue) were taken of each of 42 locations, or "footprints," across the planet. The full color footprints were put together to produce a mosaic that is 8,888 pixels across and 4,544 pixels tall. The smallest features seen here are 38 kilometers (24 miles) across. Many of Saturn's splendid features noted previously in single frames taken by Cassini are visible in this one detailed, all-encompassing view: subtle color variations across the rings, the thread-like F ring, ring shadows cast against the blue northern hemisphere, the planet's shadow making its way across the rings to the left, and blue-grey storms in Saturn's southern hemisphere to the right. Tiny Mimas and even smaller Janus are both faintly visible at the lower left. The Sun-Saturn-Cassini, or phase, angle at the time was 72 degrees; hence, the partial illumination of Saturn in this portrait. Later in the mission, when the spacecraft's trajectory takes it far from Saturn and also into the direction of the Sun, Cassini will be able to look back and view Saturn and its rings in a more fully-illuminated geometry.| JPL Photojournal ( image link )| NASA/JPL/Space Science Institute| [{Image src='https://www.austria-forum.org/cc/images/slim/publicdomain.png' alt='Public domain' align='center' link='https://www.austria-forum.org/cc/public-domain-10.html' target='_blank'}]| Datei:Saturn from Cassini Orbiter (2004-10-06).jpg %% %%