Every hour of the day, every day of the year, our Solar System is just out there beyond Earth's pale blue sky, doing its thing. Sometimes – if we're in the right place at the right time – we get to see that thing from a new perspective.

A little spacecraft over 100 million kilometers (62 million miles) from home

Continuing on ahead about its business monitoring the  Mars Express probe of ESA recently caught an eclipse involving the smaller Martian moon, Deimos, and Jupiter with its four Galilean moons.

On 14 February 2022, the arrangement of these cosmic bodies was recorded on camera, in a progression of 80 pictures that was then sewed together into a film.

It is extremely unusual because Deimos must be exactly in the orbital plane of Jupiter's moons for the alignment to occur."

In the next page Watch video of Martian Moon Deimos as it eclipses Jupiter as seen by the Mars Express satellite

Deimos passing in front of Jupiter and its Galilean moons courtesy: www.esa.int

Deimos is gradually creating some distance from Mars. On the off chance that it go on in this pattern, researchers imagine that it will ultimately get away from Mars' gravitational hold and make its own specific manner in the enormous wide Nearby planet group