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Éphéméride astronomique du jour

Données astronomiques

Soleil
Lever
08:41
Coucher
17:07
Durée du jour 8h 25min (+1min 3s) Midi solaire 12:54 Crépuscule civil 08:07 — 17:42 Heure dorée 16:07 — 17:07
Lune
Gibbeuse croissante — 02/01/2026
Gibbeuse croissante
Illumination : 99%

Image astronomique du jour

NanoSail-D2

NanoSail-D2

In 2011, on January 20, NASA's NanoSail-D2 unfurled a very thin and very reflective 10 square meter sail becoming the first solar sail spacecraft in low Earth orbit. Often considered the stuff of science fiction, sailing through space was suggested 400 years ago by astronomer Johannes Kepler, who had observed comet tails blown by the solar wind. But modern solar sail spacecraft designs, like NanoSail-D2, Japan's interplanetary spacecraft IKAROS, or the Planetary Society's Lightsail A, rely on the small but continuous pressure from sunlight itself for thrust. Glinting in the sunlight as it circled planet Earth, NanoSail-D2's solar sail was periodically bright and visible to the eye. These remarkably detailed images were captured by manually tracking the orbiting solar sail spacecraft with a small telescope.

Crédit : Ralf Vandebergh