| ▲ | gus_massa 6 hours ago | |
It got deleted now. It would be nice to see a new versions if abailable. So, let's make some guess, but IANAA. Orion is in the middle of the trip going to the meeting point to the Moon in a quite straight line but the Moon is still not there. It will be there in 2 or 3 days, that is like 45° of the orbit.
Using some sloppy Math and sloppy Astronomy, I estimate that the difference between our point of view and their point of view is 20° or 30°. So the visible surface has like a 10% difference, that is consistent to call it a "glimpse". My estimation is also similar to the graphic posted in Reddit, but I'm not sure what was the problem.I actually can't tell the difference in the photo to save my life, but I have a friend that is astronomer and I'm sure that if I show the photo to him, he could use a sharpie to mark the difference on my screen without any problem. | ||
| ▲ | syncsynchalt 6 hours ago | parent [-] | |
Take a look at https://issinfo.net/artemis.html Your illustration is about right, but the angle they're catching now is even a bit further than you've shown. | ||