Planet | w/m2 | albedo | distance | reflected w/m2 | notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Earth | 1500 | 0.8 | 150,000,000 | 1200 | snow |
Earth | 1500 | 0.35 | 150,000,000 | 525 | desert |
Venus | 2894 | 0.65 | 108,000,000 | 1881 | |
Mercury | 6927 | 0.15 | 69,800,000 | 1039 | aphelion |
Mercury | 15950 | 0.15 | 46,000,000 | 2392 | perihelion |
Venus and Earth both have orbits that are almost circular, but Mercury is the most eccentric planet that hasn’t been cruelly demoted, so the insolation at perihelion is more than twice what it is at aphelion. As the table above shows, the fairly dark mercurial surface is slightly less bright than fresh Earthly snow when Mercury is farthest from the sun, but it is almost twice as bright when the planet is at its closest approach. So an astronaut could very easily go snowblind from looking at it. On the other hand, mountaineering goggles would be more than adequate when near apahelion. But the original question was about ‘true’ color. Sunglasses are rarely spectrally neutral, so as soon as they go on, true color disappears.
In fact, when we log drill cuttings in the desert, the time when sunnies go on in the morning and come off in the afternoon is noted, because it can change the reported rock color.
Watt's a w? You mean a W?
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"Back of the envelope" means "sufficiently hasty, so that fine details like whether or not the shift key is depressed can be ignored".
ReplyDeleteMy uncle worked on messenger...I'm not sure what he did...
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