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Sky of Two Hemispheres - By: Babak A. Tafreshi
Featured as NASA's Astronomy Picture of the Days. Why the constellation Orion stands so different in these two images? Some of the familiar constellations of the northern hemisphere are also visible from the south but they appear upside down! Both images are taken in December and the field of view is similar. The left image is from the southern-most Australia in the beautiful island of Bruny, off the cost from Tasmania. In this moonlit night the Orion stands on its head above the Southern Ocean (Antarctic Ocean). The right image shows the Hunter above Alborz Mountains of Iran. The comparing images also illustrate two different environment at the same time. The snow-covered landscape displays the beginning of winter in northern hemisphere while in the south the new year eve is during the warm of summer. Read more about this image and sky from two hemispheres on Phil Plait's Bad Astronomy.
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