I can't find 1 image, but I've heard there are a lot of geostationary satellites. Hovering in one specific spot in the sky, rotating with the Earth's spin and tilt, rotating with Earth's orbit around the Sun, and all that spinning going around galactic center. Pretty amazing stuff, I would just like to see one amateur or professional telescopic image of 1(one) of these GEOSTATIONARY SATELLITES.
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This is not an answer, but it suggests that the answer will likely be "yes". You can probably see them with small telescopes, but the hard part is pointing in the right place. – uhoh Mar 11 '17 at 15:04
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1Related, there's a cool reddit post showing geostationary satellites ina video someone took and then made a gif of. – BruceWayne Mar 11 '17 at 21:16
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"Resolved images of a geostationary satellite were obtained on October 30, 2009, with the adaptive optics on the largest telescope on the planet, the 10 m Keck-II on the 14000 foot summit of Mauna Kea."
Here ya go:
Organic Marble
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4The use of three different scales with the units meters, arc seconds and microradians is very remarkable. The fans of imperial units might miss a fourth scale with feet, but I don't think it is necessary. The pixel size would be of interest too, I guess about 2.5 m for a pixel. – Uwe Mar 11 '17 at 15:33
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7They did manage to get "feet" in when they described the mountain. I'm holding out for furlongs! – Organic Marble Mar 11 '17 at 15:49
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@immibis LFFs are about 14 1/4 inches. Multiply by 0.84 to convert feet to light-femtofortnights. – uhoh Mar 12 '17 at 10:51
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