![]() ![]() Geographic Region: JAPAN Feature: MT. FUJI, SNOW, SWITCHBACKS |
![]() |
Mount Fuji, Japan Astronauts need to take advantage of oblique views and low sun angles to capture a strong sense of three dimensions in the photographs they take from the International Space Station. This detailed image was taken by an astronaut using the most powerful lens presently on board. The low afternoon sun emphasizes the conical shape of Japan's most famous volcano. Other details enhance the sense of topography in the image--numerous gullies in the flanks and shadows cast in the summit crater and especially in the side crater (Hoei Crater, image lower center margin). Another view of the opposite side of the cone (STS107-E-5689) likewise provides a sense of topography; it was taken from the Space Shuttle Columbia 5 days before its failed reentry from orbit. Flying in space can make even the highest mountains can look flat, if the astronaut looks straight down and if the sun is high--a strange sensation for humans who know mountains from a ground-level standpoint. A slightly less detailed image of the volcano, taken with an 800 mm lens, was taken at a higher sun angle gives less of a 3D sense. Mount Fuji is one of Japan's most striking symbols and tourism in the area is highly developed. The switchbacks of a climbing toll road can be seen clearly on the upper center margin of the image. As a satisfyingly symmetrical peak Fuji is extensively photographed, being visible from great distances (it is the highest peak in Japan at 3776 m, 12,389 feet) with a brilliant snow cap for many months of the year. Mount Fuji has great cultural importance in Japan. It is a hallowed mountain in the Shinto religion. Pilgrims have climbed the mountain as a devotional practice for centuries. Many shrines dot the landscape around the volcano, and are even located within the summit crater. It is now a UNESCO World Heritage Cultural Site. |
Images: | All Available Images Low-Resolution 99k |
|
Mission: | ISS046 |
|
Roll - Frame: | E - 35820 |
|
Geographical Name: | JAPAN |
|
Features: | MT. FUJI, SNOW, SWITCHBACKS |
|
Center Lat x Lon: | 35.4N x 138.7E |
|
Film Exposure: | N=Normal exposure, U=Under exposed, O=Over exposed, F=out of Focus |
|
Percentage of Cloud Cover-CLDP: | 10 |
|
Camera:: | N6 |
|
Camera Tilt: | 21 | LO=Low Oblique, HO=High Oblique, NV=Near Vertical |
Camera Focal Length: | 1150 |
|
Nadir to Photo Center Direction: | W | The direction from the nadir to the center point, N=North, S=South, E=East, W=West |
Stereo?: | Y=Yes there is an adjacent picture of the same area, N=No there isn't |
|
Orbit Number: | |
|
Date: | 20160208 | YYYYMMDD |
Time: | 064516 | GMT HHMMSS |
Nadir Lat: | 34.8N |
Latitude of suborbital point of spacecraft |
Nadir Lon: | 139.9E |
Longitude of suborbital point of spacecraft |
Sun Azimuth: | 238 | Clockwise angle in degrees from north to the sun measured at the nadir point |
Space Craft Altitude: | 214 | nautical miles |
Sun Elevation: | 16 | Angle in degrees between the horizon and the sun, measured at the nadir point |
Land Views: | CRATER, MOUNTAIN, VOLCANO |
|
Water Views: | |
|
Atmosphere Views: | |
|
Man Made Views: | |
|
City Views: | |
|
Photo is not associated with any sequences |
NASA Human Space Flight | NASA Home Page | JSC Home Page | NASA Image eXchange | JSC Digital Image Collection | Earth Science & Remote Sensing |
|