See the First-Ever Direct Images of the Sun's South Pole, Captured by the Solar Orbiter Spacecraft
See the First-Ever Direct Images of the Sun's South Pole, Captured by the Solar Orbiter Spacecraft
Yeah, that regular hexagon is something like twice the Earth’s diameter on a side, it’s enormous. I was wondering if we know of a regular hexagon larger than that anywhere in the known universe?
It’s a bit like, is the Titanic the largest manmade object ever accidentally broken in half?
Or did it not carry a camera?
It did not:
All pre-existing images of the sun were taken from within about 7 degrees of its equator. That’s because every spacecraft orbiting the star, along with every planet in our solar system, swoops around the sun in a flat disk called the ecliptic plane, which is tilted just 7.25 degrees relative to the sun’s equatorial plane. (The Ulysses spacecraft is the only one to have passed over the sun’s poles, but it didn’t have a camera.)