It is important for those with Neptune in the 7th house to choose carefully in relationships, and to be honest with oneself. Those with Neptune in the house of significant others will often cherish, idealize and fantasize about the loved one. Essentially they are part of our own make-up, and Jung termed these projections "imaginary relationships". It is through others that we live out the unconscious parts of ourselves, and when the blue planet occupies this position in the horoscope it is usually the other person that becomes the carrier for the symbol of Neptune. This means that we see both positive and negative traits in others before realizing they are our own. When planets are placed in the 7th house they fall into our projections, those qualities within ourselves that are reflected back to us. This sphere of life should never be taken lightly, as relationships are some of the most important and powerful experiences in our lives. Similarly it describes our significant others, and indicates the kind of partner to whom we are attracted. The seventh house is traditionally known as the "house of marriage". Thank you, RET and AVAO, for identifying the beautiful barred galaxy!ĪVAO, I'm not sure I understand what you mean by Jupiter being 6 times too large compared with Neptune in the HST image compared with the JWST image.Those with Neptune in the 7th house find this planet most commonly expressed in the area of relationships, and its position describes the qualities, traits, and characteristics we tend to meet in others. The fact that Jupiter (HST) appears about 6 times too large compared to the image of Neptune (JWST) is due to the difference in the spatial positions of the planets and the telescopes at different times. Interesting: The image below shows that a survey of Jupiter was previously made with Hubble at almost the same position. I very much wanted to know the designation of the lovely barred spiral galaxy in the lower left corner, but I have found no information on it. So we could see what the target in question looked like in (for example) the B, V and near infrared channels. (In this case there are four source channels mapped onto three output channels, which represents an irreversible convolution of the data.)īack when Hubble Heritage was active, and they published one new Heritage image every month, they used to show the individual channels, too. We really need to go back to the individual channels that the color image is constructed from. Yet we see a bright white rim that suggests large amounts of near-IR as well as thermal-IR.Īs always, trying to understand what's really going on is difficult or impossible using a color image like this. The spikes appear almost entirely in the blue channel, but that represents the shortest wavelengths, in the near-IR, where Neptune is supposed to be not very bright. There are many confusing things about the image. It looks like the diffraction spikes on Neptune could be due more to the bright rim than to the darker methane-induced IR-absorbing body. Neptune's diffraction spikes are there, but they are much less obvious than the spikes of Triton, because they are broad and diffuse. Neptune diffraction spikes NIRCAM annotated.png I would not describe Neptune's appearance here as "dark", and indeed, it has diffraction spikes about the same length as those of Triton. Details of the complex ring system are seen here for the first time since Neptune was visited by the Voyager 2 spacecraft in August 1989.ĪPOD Robot wrote: ↑ Fri 4:06 am Ringed Ice Giant Neptune Neptune's faint rings are striking in this new space-based planetary portrait. Including Triton, seven of Neptune's 14 known moons can be identified in the field of view. Coated with frozen nitrogen, Neptune's largest moon Triton is brighter than Neptune in reflected sunlight and is seen at upper left sporting the Webb's characteristic diffraction spikes. High altitude clouds that reach above most of Neptune's absorbing methane easily stand out in the image though. But in the stunning Webb view the planet's dark and ghostly appearance is due to atmospheric methane that absorbs infrared light. The dim and distant world is the farthest planet from the Sun, about 30 times farther away than planet Earth. Explanation: Ringed, ice giant Neptune lies near the center of this sharp near-infrared image from the James Webb Space Telescope.
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