What an amazing view of Earth from Artemis II.
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@coreyspowell Thanks for posting this photo and sharing the link!
️Is there some reason why this image has been rotated? The one on the website is oriented differently (see attached image).
The description from NASA website seems to match up with this image, especially the fairly bright "zodiacal light" - a term which I learned today!
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@ahimsa_pdx @coreyspowell I can see why, flipping the image orients it to roughly north to south rather than the inverse.
@nini @coreyspowell
I'm not completely against the idea of rotating an image (there is no "north" in space) but then the alt text should be rewritten to match the image.The bright slice of light (zodiacal light) is in the lower right in the original orientation shown on the website but in the rotated image it is in the upper left.
I found that a bit confusing.
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@vk6flab Or, you could see the pro version the Canadian Space Agency had already made:
https://artemis.cdnspace.ca/ -
What an amazing view of Earth from Artemis II.
The Sun is behind the Earth, illuminating a thin crescent. This low-light shot, taken by Reid Wiseman using a Nikon D5, shows auroras over the poles, city lights, and the glow of the atmosphere.
And yes, there are stars!
https://www.nasa.gov/image-article/hello-world/ #space #science #nature #technology
BuT LoOk, iT's fLaT!!
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What an amazing view of Earth from Artemis II.
The Sun is behind the Earth, illuminating a thin crescent. This low-light shot, taken by Reid Wiseman using a Nikon D5, shows auroras over the poles, city lights, and the glow of the atmosphere.
And yes, there are stars!
https://www.nasa.gov/image-article/hello-world/ #space #science #nature #technology
@coreyspowell The most beautiful planet of the Universe!!!

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What an amazing view of Earth from Artemis II.
The Sun is behind the Earth, illuminating a thin crescent. This low-light shot, taken by Reid Wiseman using a Nikon D5, shows auroras over the poles, city lights, and the glow of the atmosphere.
And yes, there are stars!
https://www.nasa.gov/image-article/hello-world/ #space #science #nature #technology
@coreyspowell Notice the aurora glow at 1 and 7 O'clock. That level is still far above our usable atmosphere. It is easy to see how that thin layer can easily be filled with human generated green house gas and pollution. Its like we are the fish swimming in our own tank of waste, hoping the filter system does not break down.

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What an amazing view of Earth from Artemis II.
The Sun is behind the Earth, illuminating a thin crescent. This low-light shot, taken by Reid Wiseman using a Nikon D5, shows auroras over the poles, city lights, and the glow of the atmosphere.
And yes, there are stars!
https://www.nasa.gov/image-article/hello-world/ #space #science #nature #technology
@coreyspowell Not that long of an exposure, as far as astrophotography goes anyway - just 1/4 s. The amount of light captured is thanks to the wide open aperture (f/4), which also made details blurry, and the insanely high sensitivity setting (ISO 51200), which put a ton of noise over the whole image, and made a lot of stars indistinguishable from aberrant pixels

as a photography nerd this makes me a little bit sad, especially since the settings were manual
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What an amazing view of Earth from Artemis II.
The Sun is behind the Earth, illuminating a thin crescent. This low-light shot, taken by Reid Wiseman using a Nikon D5, shows auroras over the poles, city lights, and the glow of the atmosphere.
And yes, there are stars!
https://www.nasa.gov/image-article/hello-world/ #space #science #nature #technology
@coreyspowell, see how flat it is?
Told ya. -
What an amazing view of Earth from Artemis II.
The Sun is behind the Earth, illuminating a thin crescent. This low-light shot, taken by Reid Wiseman using a Nikon D5, shows auroras over the poles, city lights, and the glow of the atmosphere.
And yes, there are stars!
https://www.nasa.gov/image-article/hello-world/ #space #science #nature #technology
@coreyspowell oh btw, the alt text doesn't match any more, seems like your upload of the image is rotated 180
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What an amazing view of Earth from Artemis II.
The Sun is behind the Earth, illuminating a thin crescent. This low-light shot, taken by Reid Wiseman using a Nikon D5, shows auroras over the poles, city lights, and the glow of the atmosphere.
And yes, there are stars!
https://www.nasa.gov/image-article/hello-world/ #space #science #nature #technology
@coreyspowell I know nothing about space so please help. If we have a gazillion satellites orbiting why can’t we see any?
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What an amazing view of Earth from Artemis II.
The Sun is behind the Earth, illuminating a thin crescent. This low-light shot, taken by Reid Wiseman using a Nikon D5, shows auroras over the poles, city lights, and the glow of the atmosphere.
And yes, there are stars!
https://www.nasa.gov/image-article/hello-world/ #space #science #nature #technology
@coreyspowell For the last time, the Earth is round.
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@k37 @coreyspowell faaake fake fake. If this is the night side why is it so bright? Can I eat this crayon? Let's find out.
likely
@coreyspowell @tezoatlipoca @k37 CEE… GEE… EYE… They are losing their minds!

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To be clear: We're basically looking at an eclipse of the Sun, by the Earth.
This is the night side of our planet, illuminated by the light of the full Moon, seen in a long exposure. Wow!
Amaze! Amaze! Amaze!
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@vk6flab Or, you could see the pro version the Canadian Space Agency had already made:
https://artemis.cdnspace.ca/@ZenHeathen @vk6flab Thank you! I hadn't seen the CSA one, I'll set that one up on my wall display. The fan-made one seems to have the wrong data (it's significantly ahead of where the mission actually is in both MET and distance) at least on my machines.
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@ZenHeathen @vk6flab Thank you! I hadn't seen the CSA one, I'll set that one up on my wall display. The fan-made one seems to have the wrong data (it's significantly ahead of where the mission actually is in both MET and distance) at least on my machines.
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What an amazing view of Earth from Artemis II.
The Sun is behind the Earth, illuminating a thin crescent. This low-light shot, taken by Reid Wiseman using a Nikon D5, shows auroras over the poles, city lights, and the glow of the atmosphere.
And yes, there are stars!
https://www.nasa.gov/image-article/hello-world/ #space #science #nature #technology
@coreyspowell Must be magical to see it in person. Kinda makes me sad I'll never get to.
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What an amazing view of Earth from Artemis II.
The Sun is behind the Earth, illuminating a thin crescent. This low-light shot, taken by Reid Wiseman using a Nikon D5, shows auroras over the poles, city lights, and the glow of the atmosphere.
And yes, there are stars!
https://www.nasa.gov/image-article/hello-world/ #space #science #nature #technology
@coreyspowell beautiful!
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What an amazing view of Earth from Artemis II.
The Sun is behind the Earth, illuminating a thin crescent. This low-light shot, taken by Reid Wiseman using a Nikon D5, shows auroras over the poles, city lights, and the glow of the atmosphere.
And yes, there are stars!
https://www.nasa.gov/image-article/hello-world/ #space #science #nature #technology
@coreyspowell Trump/USA wants to show us the precious blue marble that they are destroying via climate change denial? They dont care about the planet.
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@coreyspowell
I wonder! What are flat-earthers thinking these days??They won't ever care about any proof. If some proof could convince them, it would have already, there are tons of them.
Anything that contradicts their model is simply labeled as "fake". AI will probably make it worse.
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Here is another version of the marvelous new Artemis II view of Earth, taken just minutes later.
This shot uses a shorter exposure, emphasizing the night side of our planet as it eclipses the Sun.
@coreyspowell ominous. People on that planet are up to no good