This is the first picture of the earth from lunar orbit.
Blue marble picture apollo 8.
View of the earth as seen by the apollo 17 crew astronaut eugene a.
It was not until this stunning photo along with many others came back to earth with the apollo 8 astronauts in late december 1968 that we saw earth as a vibrant delicate blue and white globe framed by the velvety blackness of space.
Schmitt lunar module pilot traveling toward the moon.
This was the first time the apollo trajectory.
Earthrise was followed by blue marble a view of the earth taken from the apollo 17 spacecraft in 1972.
T his photograph is now half a century old.
On december 7 1972 the crew of apollo 17 changed the way we look at our home planet.
The new collection is called the blue marble.
It was taken by the astronaut bill anders on christmas eve 1968 as the apollo 8 spacecraft rounded the dark side of the moon for a fourth time.
Here s the story behind the picture blue marble.
The home planet as seen from lunar orbit christmas.
This spectacular blue marble image is the most detailed true color image of the entire earth to date.
Although not a blue marble as it s in black and white lunar orbiter 1 took an earlier earthrise photo on august 23 1966.
It mainly shows the earth from the mediterranean sea to antarctica.
Using a collection of satellite based observations scientists and visualizers stitched together months of observations of the land surface oceans sea ice and clouds into a seamless true color mosaic of every square kilometer 386 square mile of our planet.
Evans command module pilot.
This translunar coast photograph extends from the mediterranean sea area to the antarctica south polar ice cap.
Apollo 8 s earthrise photo changed our understanding of our place in the universe.
From the great distance of the moon nearly the entire western hemisphere is visible.
That was the last of the apollo moon missions but nasa s space probes continued to take.
This photograph illustrates the earth as an isolated ecosystem floating in space.
This is the first picture of the earth from lunar orbit.