A newly released Hubble Space Telescope mosaic image shows the nearby spiral galaxy M83 in rich detail, Also known as the Southern Pinwheel, the galaxy lies 15 million light-years away in the constellation of Hydra. Bold magentas and blues indicate the galaxy blazes with star formation, and the galactic panorama depicts stellar birth and death on a vast scale of 50,000 light-years. courtesy Space.com
Scientists have finally come up with an explanation for a visual illusion that was first identified in the 16th century by Galileo Galilei.
He noticed how large the planet Venus appears to the naked eye when compared to Jupiter - which is quite the reverse when seen through a telescope.
Venus is nearer to Earth than Jupiter and therefore appears brighter in the night sky, but this alone cannot account for its larger-than-life appearance. There must be another reason to do with the way the eye perceives light compared to the optical reality of a telescope, scientists said.
Viewed directly with the naked eye, Venus appears to have a "radiant crown" which makes it look eight to 10 times bigger than Jupiter even though Jupiter is four times larger when seen from Earth.
Galileo was the first to realise that this radiant crown was something to do with human perception, or, as he described it, an "impediment of our eyes" which the telescope eliminated, but he put it down to some kind of optical interference to the light from the planets as the light entered the human eye.
However, scientists have now shown that the effect is caused by the way the light-sensitive cells at the back of the eye respond to images of different intensity set against a dark background. Venus appears larger because its brighter-than-Jupiter image is much exaggerated by the visual centres of the brain to create a bigger radiant crown than Jupiter's, according to the study published in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
The edges of a light object appear blurred and this is effectively magnified by the brain so that the entire object appears bigger than it should. Venus, being nearer to Earth, is brighter than Jupiter and so it appears bigger against the dark background of the night sky, said Dr Jose-Manuel Alonso of the State University of New York College of Optometry.