Free PDF downloads:. A display-quality 55'x36' poster that, without worries about tearing or wrinkling. Use the default 'performance knit' fabric. As of February 2018, the price is $24. Be sure to choose the correct aspect ratio for the size you want! Readability and image quality are best for poster widths between 24' and 48'.
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Many poster printers will still do fine at larger sizes, but I recommend that you not go much smaller. As of February 2018, prices start under $15 for a 24' poster on cheap paper, while a full 48' version on semi-gloss paper is around $60. The full 3.2MB PDF of by can be downloaded freely for non-commercial use under a. Individuals or educational institutions that want a physical copy are welcome to print one or to pay a commercial printing company to do so; the versions on and should be quite good. The original poster has a 4:3 aspect ratio, but I have also made a that still looks quite good; is available under the same terms.
(If you'd prefer not to include the Alma College logo, those same terms also govern this and this ). The JPG images of the full posters on this page can be used on other sites as long as attribution and a link back to the primary poster page page are provided as noted below. For attribution (including Creative Commons usage), please give credit to 'Dr. Steuard Jensen (Alma College)' or a similar phrase,. My goal with this poster is to convey a sense of scale while showing off some beautiful images, and to share some neat facts along the way. Too many posters like this just list dull numerical data for each planet; I wanted something more interesting. (Would you rather know that Europa has a mass of 4.8x10 22 kg or that it has a liquid water ocean under its icy crust?) The choice of objects to include was inevitably a bit arbitrary.
Ceres and Charon are the 'two notable others' in the poster's overall description. It's still important to include Pluto (people will be puzzled or disappointed if you don't), but that essentially requires you to include Charon (since they're arguably a double planet) and Eris (since it's bigger). It felt odd to include representatives of the Kuiper belt and the scattered disk without mentioning the asteroid belt anywhere, so I also included Ceres (one of the original dwarf planets).
I feel a little bad for omitting Sedna (such an interesting object!), but I'd rather avoid too much clutter with the many other official and likely dwarf planets. As for moons, I arbitrarily chose my size cutoff to be just under 1500 km in diameter, largely because I really started running out of unique and interesting facts at that point. (I originally planned to stop at 2000 km, but that left Saturn and Uranus looking unreasonably lonely.) And yes, that's a tiny picture of the Sun (to scale) embedded in the initial line of the Orbital Distances section. The pictures (except the Sun) are all taken from actual NASA data in more or less true color as you might see them. (That means I've had to leave out some interesting but hard-to-see features like the rings of Uranus and the other gas giants or detailed cloud bands on Uranus and Venus, but for this poster accuracy trumps art.) A few have been flipped horizontally to create a consistent shadow direction, and all have been adjusted to the same scale. At the original 4'x3' size, the scale is 3.5x10 8:1 (or 5500 mi/in). Even at this size the resolution is quite respectable: two images (Saturn and Uranus) are around 120ppi and everything else ranges from 150-600ppi.
(600ppi is easy when most images are scaled so small.) The main body fonts are 20pt and higher, so even at half size it should be perfectly comfortable to read. At full size (48' wide), both versions effectively have a 1' border on all sides (the interesting parts of the Sun are farther in; also, in the 3:2 version the image credits at the bottom are in the border area). Finally, I'll preemptively answer a question that a few people have asked: why do I use the phrase 'liquified natural gas' when describing Titan?
My first draft actually said 'liquid hydrocarbons' instead, but I worried that word was a bit too technical. On the other hand, most people do know about natural gas, which (before purification) is precisely a mix of hydrocarbons, so it seemed like a decent fit (even if it's a slightly awkward phrase).
NASA's Astronomy Picture of the Day has when talking about Titan, so I feel pretty much okay with it. Best available solar system images For anyone else looking for good pictures of the planets and other solar system objects, here's a list that I compiled while making the poster. These are the 'best available' images that I've found by my own quirky standards: I've insisted on color images (preferably as close to true color as possible), I prefer high resolution, and in general I prefer fewer restrictions on how the images can be used. I tracked down many of these images using, though not all of them are listed there.
Wikipedia's was also helpful (and most image files there link to the original sources). In the list below, I have included my notes on the approximate size and scale of the object in the photo and on the license terms and image credits, but you should always verify those details yourself before use.
('Diameter' is my measured diameter of the spherical object; you can find the full image dimensions yourself.) Click on the image thumbnails to go to get the full image from the original source. (In most cases, that's a NASA page with a detailed description.) Although most of these are NASA public domain images ('PD', below), they still request that you provide an appropriate image credit.
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