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The Blue Marble

The Blue Marble is a photograph of Earth taken on December 7, 1972, from a distance of around 29,400 kilometers (18,300 miles) from the planet's surface.[1]

The Blue Marble, taken by either Ron Evans or Harrison Schmitt of the Apollo 17 crew in 1972. The original photograph was taken with the south pole facing the top, however this version is the most widely distributed.

The original image (whose official NASA designation is AS17-148-22727) was taken by either Ron Evans or Harrison Schmitt of the crew of the Apollo 17 spacecraft on its way to the Moon, and showed the Earth with the south pole facing upwards; since then, a cropped and rotated version has become one of the most reproduced images in history.[2][3]

It mainly shows Earth from the Mediterranean Sea to Antarctica. This was the first time the Apollo trajectory made it possible to photograph the south polar ice cap, despite the Southern Hemisphere being heavily covered in clouds. In addition to the Arabian Peninsula and Madagascar, almost the entire coastline of Africa and most of the Indian Ocean are clearly visible, a cyclone in the Indian Ocean is also visible, the South Asian mainland is on the eastern limb.

NASA has also applied the name to a 2012 series of images which cover the entire globe at relatively high resolution. These were created by looking through satellite pictures taken over time in order to find as many cloudless photographs as possible to use in the final images. NASA has verified that the 2012 "blue marble" images are composites, made from multiple images taken in low Earth orbit. Likewise, these images do not fit together properly and due to lighting, weather and cloud interference it is impossible to collect cohesive or fully clear images of the entire Earth simultaneously.[4]

The photograph edit

 
Color-calibrated version

The photograph, taken on December 7, 1972,[5] is one of the most widely distributed photographic images in existence.[3] The astronauts had the Earth's south pole facing upwards and the Sun above them (in spatial navigation terms, to their zenith)[6] when they took the image. To the astronauts, the Earth had the appearance and size of a glass marble.

History edit

Context edit

The Blue Marble was not the first clear color image taken of an illuminated face of Earth, since such images by satellites had already been made and released as early as 1967,[7] and is the second time such a photo was taken by a person after the 1968 photograph Earthrise taken by William Anders of Apollo 8.[8]

Before the Blue Marble a picture of the fully illuminated Earth by the ATS-3 satellite was used in 1968 by Stewart Brand for his Whole Earth Catalog, after campaigning since 1966 to have NASA release a then-rumored satellite image of the entire Earth as seen from space. He got inspired during an LSD trip, seeing a "psychedelic illusion" of the Earth's curvature, convincing him that a picture of the entire planet would change how humans related to it.[9][10] He sold and distributed buttons for 25 cents each[11] that asked: "Why haven't we seen a photograph of the whole Earth yet?"[12] During this campaign, Brand met Richard Buckminster Fuller, who offered to help Brand with his project.[13] Several of the pins made their way to NASA employees.[10]

The Apollo 17 image, however, released during a surge in environmental activism during the 1970s, became a symbol of the environmental movement, as a depiction of Earth's fragility, vulnerability, and isolation amid the vast expanse of space.[2]

Today, as speculated by NASA archivist Mike Gentry, The Blue Marble is among the most widely distributed images in history.[3]

Circumstances edit

 
AS17-148-22727, from which The Blue Marble was cropped

The photograph's official NASA designation is AS17-148-22727.[14] It is the third of a series of shots which were taken just before and are nearly identical, NASA photograph AS17-148-22725[15] and AS17-148-22726, the second also having been used as a full-Earth image.[16] The widely published versions are cropped and chromatically adjusted from the original photographs.[17][18]

According to the photograph description by NASA it was taken at 05:39 a.m. EST,[8] 5 hours 6 minutes after launch of the Apollo 17 mission,[19] and about 1 hour 54 minutes after the spacecraft left its parking orbit around Earth to begin its trajectory to the Moon.[20] Alternatively, Eric Hartwell has identified it as having been taken slightly earlier at 5 hours 3 minutes, when one crew member states having changed the f-number, presumably between AS17-148-22725, the first of the series of photos, and the following less exposed images like the Blue Marble.[3] At that time, Africa was in noon[8] daylight and with the December solstice approaching, Antarctica was also illuminated.

The photograph is at times oriented with Earth's south pointing up,[19] relative to the capsule.[21]

The picture shows many weather systems,[22] featuring a Shapyro–Keyser cyclone near to the center of the image. Cyclone Sixteen (16B) can be seen in the upper right of the image. This storm had brought flooding and high winds to the Indian state of Tamil Nadu on December 5, two days before the photograph was taken.[23][24] This image has also been used to validate state-of-the-art atmospheric reanalysis fifty years after it was taken.[25]

The photographer used a 70-millimeter Hasselblad camera with an 80-millimeter Zeiss lens.[26][27] NASA generally credits images to the whole crew of a mission.[3] All crew members, Gene Cernan, Ronald Evans and Harrison Schmitt, took photographs during the mission with the onboard Hasselblad. They have largely avoided definitively answering the question of the photographer's identity by each member claiming to have taken it.[28] However, interviews[6] and evidence examined by Eric Hartwell after the mission suggest that Schmitt was the photographer.[3]

Apollo 17 was the last crewed lunar mission. No human since has been far enough from Earth to photograph a whole-Earth image[2] such as The Blue Marble, but whole-Earth images have been taken by many uncrewed spacecraft missions.[29]

Subsequent Blue Marble images edit

Subsequent similar images of Earth (including composites at much higher resolution) have also been termed Blue Marble images, and the phrase "blue marble" (as well as the picture itself) is frequently used, as in the Earth flag by environmental activist organizations or companies attempting to promote an environmentally conscious image. There has also been a children's television program called Big Blue Marble. Poet-diplomat Abhay Kumar penned an Earth anthem inspired by the Blue Marble which contains "all the peoples and the nations of the world, one for all, all for one, united we unfurl the blue marble flag".[30][better source needed]

Imaging series 2001–2004 edit

 
Blue Marble composite images generated by NASA in 2001 and 2002
 
NASA Earth Observatory animation of Blue Marble Next Generation (2004)

In 2002, NASA released an extensive set of satellite-captured imagery, including prepared images suitable for direct human viewing, as well as complete sets suitable for use in preparing further works.[31] At the time, 1 km/pixel was the most detailed imagery available for free, and permitted for reuse[32] without a need for extensive preparatory work to eliminate cloud cover and conceal missing data, or to parse specialized data formats. The data also included a similarly manually assembled cloud-cover and night-lights image sets, at lower resolutions.

A subsequent release was made in 2005, named Blue Marble Next Generation.[33] This series of digital image mosaics was produced with the aid of automated image-sifting upon images from NASA's Earth Observatory, which enabled the inclusion of a complete, cloud-free globe for each month from January to December 2004, at even higher resolution (500 m/pixel).[34] The original release of a single-image set covering the entire globe could not reflect the extent of seasonal snow-and-vegetative cover across both hemispheres, but this newer release closely modeled the changes of the seasons.

A number of interactive viewers for these data have also been released, among them a music visualization for the PlayStation 3 that is based on the texture data.[34][35]

Blue Marble 2012 edit

 
Blue Marble 2012 – a composite satellite image

On January 25, 2012, NASA released a composite image of the Western Hemisphere of Earth titled Blue Marble 2012. Robert Simmon is most notable for his visualization of the Western Hemisphere. The picture logged over 3.1 million views on the Flickr image hosting website within the first week of release.[36] On February 2, 2012, NASA released a companion to this new Blue Marble, showing a composite image of the Eastern Hemisphere from data obtained on January 23, 2012.[37]

The picture is composed of data obtained by the Visible/Infrared Imager Radiometer Suite (VIIRS) instrument on board the Suomi NPP satellite on January 4, 2012.[37][38] The data was obtained from six orbits of the Earth by the Suomi NPP over an eight-hour period.[37] The image was created using a near-sided perspective projection with the viewing point placed 2,100 km (1,300 miles) above 20° North by 100° West. This projection results in a very wide-angle presentation such as one might get with a fish-eye lens, and it does not include the whole hemisphere.

Black Marble 2012 edit

 
Black Marble – North and South America at night,[39] Hurricane Sandy can be seen off the coast of Florida.

On December 5, 2012, NASA released a nighttime view of Earth called Black Marble[39] during an annual meeting of Earth scientists held by the American Geophysical Union in San Francisco.[40] The images display all the human and natural matter that glows and can be detected from space.[41] The data was acquired by the Suomi NPP satellite in April and October 2012 and then mapped over existing Blue Marble imagery of Earth to provide a realistic view of the planet.[42] The Suomi NPP satellite completed 312 orbits and gathered 2.5 terabytes of data to get a clear shot of every parcel of the Earth's land surface. Named for satellite meteorology pioneer Verner Suomi, the satellite flies over any given point on Earth's surface twice each day and flies 512 miles (824 km) above the surface in a polar orbit.[43]

The nighttime views were obtained with the new satellite's "day-night band" of the Visible Infrared Imaging Radiometer Suite (VIIRS), which detects light in a range of wavelengths from green to near-infrared, and uses filtering techniques to observe dim signals such as city lights, gas flares, auroras, wildfires, and reflected moonlight. Auroras, fires, and other stray light have been removed in the case of the Black Marble images to emphasize the city lights.[42] The images have been used to study the spatial distribution of economic activity, to select sites for astronomical observatories, and to monitor human activities around protected areas.[42]

DSCOVR edit

 
A color corrected image of the Earth taken by the DSCOVR satellite on December 7, 2022, exactly 50 years after the original Blue Marble image

On July 21, 2015, NASA released a new Blue Marble photograph taken by a U.S. Deep Space Climate Observatory (DSCOVR), a solar weather and Earth observation satellite that was launched in February 2015 and provided a near-continuous view of the entire sunlit-side of the Earth. The image was taken on July 6, 2015.[44] The photograph, of the Western Hemisphere, is centered over Central America. The Western United States, Mexico and the Caribbean are visible, but much of South America is hidden beneath cloud cover. Greenland can be seen at the upper edge of the image.

The EPIC science team plans to upload 13 new color images per day on their website. The color balance has been adjusted to approximate an image that could be seen with the average human eye. In addition to images, scientific information will be uploaded as it becomes available after in-flight calibration is complete. The science information will be ozone and aerosol amounts, cloud reflectivity, cloud height, and vegetation information. The EPIC instrument views the Earth from sunrise in the west to sunset in the east 12 to 13 times per day as the Earth rotates at 15 degrees of longitude per hour. Clearly visible are storms forming over the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans, major slowly moving "cloud rivers", dust aerosol plumes from Africa, the Sun's reflection in the oceans, ship exhaust tracks in the clouds, rivers and lakes, and the variegated land surface patterns especially in the African deserts. The spatial resolution of the color images is about 10 km (6 miles), and the resolution of the science products will be about 20 km (10 miles). Once every three months, lunar images are obtained that are the same as those viewed from Earth during a full Moon. On occasion, the other side of the Moon will appear in the Earth images as the Moon crosses in front of the Earth.

Cultural reception edit

The picture has been identified as one of the most widely publicised and influential images since its release, particularly in the advocacy for environmental protection.[2][3]

Its reflection, and of images from space in general, has been in parts critically analyzed as distracting from human geographic issues and from being a technological product produced by a dominant spacefaring country, which developed the image and its overview effect as a boundless worldview instead of as an image inviting an intricate and critical overview.[45][46][47]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Apollo 17 Day 1: Transposition, Docking and Extraction". NASA. 2022. Retrieved October 1, 2023. By measurement of the size of Earth's image in these photographs (29mm), they were taken at a distance of about 29,400 kilometres (15,900 nautical miles).
  2. ^ a b c d Petsko, Gregory A. (April 28, 2011). "The blue marble". Genome Biology. 12 (4): 112. doi:10.1186/gb-2011-12-4-112. PMC 3218853. PMID 21554751.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g . Ehartwell.com. April 25, 2007. Archived from the original on January 9, 2008. Retrieved January 18, 2008.
  4. ^ "Elegant Figures – Crafting the Blue Marble". earthobservatory.nasa.gov. October 6, 2011. Retrieved September 30, 2022.
  5. ^ Cosgrove, Ben (April 11, 2014). . Time. Archived from the original on June 1, 2015. Retrieved December 7, 2019.
  6. ^ a b "The Story of Blue Marble Images, Part 2". CleanTechnica. January 4, 2022. Retrieved February 6, 2022. From astronaut Schmitt stating that Earth was beneath them, or to their nadir.
  7. ^ Mars, Kelli (December 17, 2020). "90 Years of Our Changing Views of Earth". NASA. Retrieved May 21, 2021.
  8. ^ a b c "The Story of the Blue Marble". CleanTechnica. January 1, 2022. Retrieved February 2, 2022.
  9. ^ "Lunch with the FT: Stewart Brand". Financial Times. January 8, 2010. Archived from the original on December 10, 2022. Retrieved May 22, 2020.
  10. ^ a b "The Guardian Profile: Stewart Brand". The Guardian. August 3, 2001. Retrieved May 22, 2020.
  11. ^ Brand, Stewart. . Smithsonian Photography Initiative. Archived from the original on May 30, 2008. Retrieved November 6, 2009.
  12. ^ Brand, Stewart (2009). Whole Earth Discipline: An Ecopragmatist Manifesto. Viking Adult. p. 214. ISBN 978-0-670-02121-5.
  13. ^ Leonard, Jennifer. . Archived from the original on December 12, 2007. Retrieved February 5, 2013.
  14. ^ . NASA. November 1, 2012. Archived from the original on April 20, 2019. Retrieved January 6, 2018.
  15. ^ "March to the Moon". March to the Moon. Retrieved February 5, 2022.
  16. ^ . The Astrophoto Lab. December 7, 1972. Archived from the original on February 5, 2022. Retrieved February 5, 2022.
  17. ^ "AS17-148-22727". Gateway to Astronaut Photography of Earth. NASA. June 1, 2019. from the original on March 30, 2017. Retrieved June 1, 2019.
  18. ^ "AS17-148-22726". Gateway to Astronaut Photography of Earth. NASA. June 1, 2019. from the original on June 1, 2019. Retrieved June 1, 2019.
  19. ^ a b Reinert, Al (April 12, 2011). "The Blue Marble Shot: Our First Complete Photograph of Earth". The Atlantic. Retrieved August 1, 2018.
  20. ^ "Apollo 17 Image Library". Apollo 17 Multimedia. NASA. Retrieved April 29, 2007.
  21. ^ . Geek Trivia. TechRepublic. December 6, 2005. Archived from the original on April 13, 2008. Retrieved June 23, 2007.
  22. ^ Gonzalez, Sergi (November 2020). "The weather of the Blue Marble". Weather. 75 (11): 366–367. Bibcode:2020Wthr...75..366G. doi:10.1002/wea.3831. hdl:20.500.11765/12609. ISSN 0043-1656. S2CID 225255076.
  23. ^ . India Meteorological Department. Archived from the original on September 25, 2014. Retrieved September 16, 2011.
  24. ^ Das, P.K.; George, C.A.; Jambunathan, R. (January 10, 1972). "Cyclones and depressions of 1971 – Bay of Bengal and Arabian Sea". MAUSAM. 23 (4): 453–466. doi:10.54302/mausam.v23i4.5305. S2CID 247037040.
  25. ^ Lopez, Philippe (November 28, 2020). "Validating the Past: Simulating the Weather in Space Mission Earth Views". Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society. 101 (11): 981–984. doi:10.1175/BAMS-D-19-0254.1. ISSN 0003-0007. S2CID 212879930.
  26. ^ Parker, Phill. "Apollo-11 Hasselblad Cameras". Apollo Lunar Surface Journal. NASA.
  27. ^ Apollo 17 Index: 70 mm, 35 mm, and 16 mm Photographs (PDF). Mapping Sciences Branch, Johnson Space Center, NASA. May 1974. p. 88.
  28. ^ Berger, Erin (December 6, 2017). "The Mystery Behind Who Took the Blue Marble Photo". Outside Online. Retrieved February 6, 2022.
  29. ^ . National Air and Space Museum, Smithsonian Institution. Archived from the original on January 16, 2021. Retrieved January 30, 2018.
  30. ^ Kumar, Abhay (May 24, 2013). . The Kathmandu Post. Archived from the original on July 17, 2015.
  31. ^ "The Blue Marble: True-Color Global Imagery at 1km Resolution". NASA Earth Observatory. October 13, 2005. Retrieved December 7, 2009.
  32. ^ Hormann, Christoph (May 30, 2007). "Earth renders using the Blue Marble 2002 data". Imagico.de. Retrieved December 7, 2009.
  33. ^ Stöckli, Reto (January 1, 2005). "Blue Marble Next Generation". Blue Marble Research.
  34. ^ a b Stöckli, Reto (October 13, 2005). "Blue Marble Next Generation". NASA Earth Observatory.
  35. ^ Sheffield, Brandon (December 26, 2007). "Special: Q-Games on PS3's 'Gaia' Music Visualizer". Gamasutra.
  36. ^ "Most Amazing High Definition Image of Earth – Blue Marble 2012". Flickr.com. NASA/Goddard Space Flight Center. January 4, 2012. Retrieved February 12, 2012.
  37. ^ a b c . NASA. February 2, 2012. Archived from the original on February 11, 2012. Retrieved February 12, 2012.
  38. ^ "Blue Marble, 2012". NASA. January 25, 2012. Retrieved February 12, 2012.
  39. ^ a b Cole, Steve; et al. (December 5, 2012). "NASA-NOAA Satellite Reveals New Views of Earth at Night". NASA. Retrieved December 9, 2012.
  40. ^ . ABC News Radio. December 5, 2012. Archived from the original on July 24, 2013. Retrieved December 9, 2012.
  41. ^ Samenow, Jason (December 5, 2012). "Satellites unveil Black Marble and spy on the moon". The Washington Post. Retrieved December 9, 2012.
  42. ^ a b c "Black Marble – Americas". Flickr.com. NASA/Goddard Space Flight Center. April–October 2012. Retrieved December 9, 2012.
  43. ^ "'Black Marble' images shine light upon a sleeping world". The Washington Post. December 5, 2012. Retrieved December 9, 2012.
  44. ^ Lendino, Jamie (July 21, 2015). "Humanity gets a new Blue Marble photo of Earth — and it's stunning". ExtremeTech. Retrieved July 23, 2015.
  45. ^ Flores, Teresa Mendes (April 10, 2012). "The Global Imagination: from 'The Blue Marble' photograph to 'Google Earth'". Academia.edu. Retrieved October 22, 2022.
  46. ^ Biondi, Charleyne (January 21, 2018). "Haris A. Durrani – The Bogotá Declaration: A Global Uprising? – Uprising 13/13". Log In ‹ Blogs @ Columbia Law School. Retrieved October 22, 2022.
  47. ^ Bimm, Jordan (February 1, 2014). "Rethinking the Overview Effect". Quest: The History of Spaceflight. Retrieved October 22, 2022.

External links edit

  • NASA history of Blue Marble image releases

1972 photograph edit

  • Apollo Image Atlas – Photos from magazine NN of the 70 mm Hasselblad camera used on Apollo 17 (includes the Blue Marble photo and similar photographs)
  • Apollo 17 in Real-time – The moment the Blue Marble photo was taken in the context of the rest of the Apollo 17 mission
  • A short list of places in which the image has been used

21st century NASA composite images edit

  • (2002)
    • – Web interface for viewing small sections of the above
  • Blue Marble: Next Generation (2005; one picture per month)
    • Blue Marble Navigator – Web interface for viewing local sections of the above, incl. links to other such interfaces, download sites, etc.
  • , with link to 2012 Composite in Super High Resolution
  • "Earth at Night: It's the end of the night as you know it; you'll see fine." – NASA Earth Observatory site with various links around the 2012 and 2017 Black Marble images

blue, marble, blue, marble, redirects, here, other, uses, blue, marble, disambiguation, photograph, earth, taken, december, 1972, from, distance, around, kilometers, miles, from, planet, surface, taken, either, evans, harrison, schmitt, apollo, crew, 1972, ori. Blue Marble redirects here For other uses see Blue Marble disambiguation The Blue Marble is a photograph of Earth taken on December 7 1972 from a distance of around 29 400 kilometers 18 300 miles from the planet s surface 1 The Blue Marble taken by either Ron Evans or Harrison Schmitt of the Apollo 17 crew in 1972 The original photograph was taken with the south pole facing the top however this version is the most widely distributed The original image whose official NASA designation is AS17 148 22727 was taken by either Ron Evans or Harrison Schmitt of the crew of the Apollo 17 spacecraft on its way to the Moon and showed the Earth with the south pole facing upwards since then a cropped and rotated version has become one of the most reproduced images in history 2 3 It mainly shows Earth from the Mediterranean Sea to Antarctica This was the first time the Apollo trajectory made it possible to photograph the south polar ice cap despite the Southern Hemisphere being heavily covered in clouds In addition to the Arabian Peninsula and Madagascar almost the entire coastline of Africa and most of the Indian Ocean are clearly visible a cyclone in the Indian Ocean is also visible the South Asian mainland is on the eastern limb NASA has also applied the name to a 2012 series of images which cover the entire globe at relatively high resolution These were created by looking through satellite pictures taken over time in order to find as many cloudless photographs as possible to use in the final images NASA has verified that the 2012 blue marble images are composites made from multiple images taken in low Earth orbit Likewise these images do not fit together properly and due to lighting weather and cloud interference it is impossible to collect cohesive or fully clear images of the entire Earth simultaneously 4 Contents 1 The photograph 1 1 History 1 1 1 Context 1 1 2 Circumstances 2 Subsequent Blue Marble images 2 1 Imaging series 2001 2004 2 2 Blue Marble 2012 2 3 Black Marble 2012 2 4 DSCOVR 3 Cultural reception 4 See also 5 References 6 External links 6 1 1972 photograph 6 2 21st century NASA composite imagesThe photograph edit nbsp Color calibrated versionThe photograph taken on December 7 1972 5 is one of the most widely distributed photographic images in existence 3 The astronauts had the Earth s south pole facing upwards and the Sun above them in spatial navigation terms to their zenith 6 when they took the image To the astronauts the Earth had the appearance and size of a glass marble History edit Context edit The Blue Marble was not the first clear color image taken of an illuminated face of Earth since such images by satellites had already been made and released as early as 1967 7 and is the second time such a photo was taken by a person after the 1968 photograph Earthrise taken by William Anders of Apollo 8 8 Before the Blue Marble a picture of the fully illuminated Earth by the ATS 3 satellite was used in 1968 by Stewart Brand for his Whole Earth Catalog after campaigning since 1966 to have NASA release a then rumored satellite image of the entire Earth as seen from space He got inspired during an LSD trip seeing a psychedelic illusion of the Earth s curvature convincing him that a picture of the entire planet would change how humans related to it 9 10 He sold and distributed buttons for 25 cents each 11 that asked Why haven t we seen a photograph of the whole Earth yet 12 During this campaign Brand met Richard Buckminster Fuller who offered to help Brand with his project 13 Several of the pins made their way to NASA employees 10 The Apollo 17 image however released during a surge in environmental activism during the 1970s became a symbol of the environmental movement as a depiction of Earth s fragility vulnerability and isolation amid the vast expanse of space 2 Today as speculated by NASA archivist Mike Gentry The Blue Marble is among the most widely distributed images in history 3 Circumstances edit nbsp AS17 148 22727 from which The Blue Marble was croppedThe photograph s official NASA designation is AS17 148 22727 14 It is the third of a series of shots which were taken just before and are nearly identical NASA photograph AS17 148 22725 15 and AS17 148 22726 the second also having been used as a full Earth image 16 The widely published versions are cropped and chromatically adjusted from the original photographs 17 18 According to the photograph description by NASA it was taken at 05 39 a m EST 8 5 hours 6 minutes after launch of the Apollo 17 mission 19 and about 1 hour 54 minutes after the spacecraft left its parking orbit around Earth to begin its trajectory to the Moon 20 Alternatively Eric Hartwell has identified it as having been taken slightly earlier at 5 hours 3 minutes when one crew member states having changed the f number presumably between AS17 148 22725 the first of the series of photos and the following less exposed images like the Blue Marble 3 At that time Africa was in noon 8 daylight and with the December solstice approaching Antarctica was also illuminated The photograph is at times oriented with Earth s south pointing up 19 relative to the capsule 21 The picture shows many weather systems 22 featuring a Shapyro Keyser cyclone near to the center of the image Cyclone Sixteen 16B can be seen in the upper right of the image This storm had brought flooding and high winds to the Indian state of Tamil Nadu on December 5 two days before the photograph was taken 23 24 This image has also been used to validate state of the art atmospheric reanalysis fifty years after it was taken 25 The photographer used a 70 millimeter Hasselblad camera with an 80 millimeter Zeiss lens 26 27 NASA generally credits images to the whole crew of a mission 3 All crew members Gene Cernan Ronald Evans and Harrison Schmitt took photographs during the mission with the onboard Hasselblad They have largely avoided definitively answering the question of the photographer s identity by each member claiming to have taken it 28 However interviews 6 and evidence examined by Eric Hartwell after the mission suggest that Schmitt was the photographer 3 Apollo 17 was the last crewed lunar mission No human since has been far enough from Earth to photograph a whole Earth image 2 such as The Blue Marble but whole Earth images have been taken by many uncrewed spacecraft missions 29 Subsequent Blue Marble images editSubsequent similar images of Earth including composites at much higher resolution have also been termed Blue Marble images and the phrase blue marble as well as the picture itself is frequently used as in the Earth flag by environmental activist organizations or companies attempting to promote an environmentally conscious image There has also been a children s television program called Big Blue Marble Poet diplomat Abhay Kumar penned an Earth anthem inspired by the Blue Marble which contains all the peoples and the nations of the world one for all all for one united we unfurl the blue marble flag 30 better source needed Imaging series 2001 2004 edit nbsp Blue Marble composite images generated by NASA in 2001 and 2002 nbsp NASA Earth Observatory animation of Blue Marble Next Generation 2004 In 2002 NASA released an extensive set of satellite captured imagery including prepared images suitable for direct human viewing as well as complete sets suitable for use in preparing further works 31 At the time 1 km pixel was the most detailed imagery available for free and permitted for reuse 32 without a need for extensive preparatory work to eliminate cloud cover and conceal missing data or to parse specialized data formats The data also included a similarly manually assembled cloud cover and night lights image sets at lower resolutions A subsequent release was made in 2005 named Blue Marble Next Generation 33 This series of digital image mosaics was produced with the aid of automated image sifting upon images from NASA s Earth Observatory which enabled the inclusion of a complete cloud free globe for each month from January to December 2004 at even higher resolution 500 m pixel 34 The original release of a single image set covering the entire globe could not reflect the extent of seasonal snow and vegetative cover across both hemispheres but this newer release closely modeled the changes of the seasons A number of interactive viewers for these data have also been released among them a music visualization for the PlayStation 3 that is based on the texture data 34 35 Blue Marble 2012 edit nbsp Blue Marble 2012 a composite satellite imageOn January 25 2012 NASA released a composite image of the Western Hemisphere of Earth titled Blue Marble 2012 Robert Simmon is most notable for his visualization of the Western Hemisphere The picture logged over 3 1 million views on the Flickr image hosting website within the first week of release 36 On February 2 2012 NASA released a companion to this new Blue Marble showing a composite image of the Eastern Hemisphere from data obtained on January 23 2012 37 The picture is composed of data obtained by the Visible Infrared Imager Radiometer Suite VIIRS instrument on board the Suomi NPP satellite on January 4 2012 37 38 The data was obtained from six orbits of the Earth by the Suomi NPP over an eight hour period 37 The image was created using a near sided perspective projection with the viewing point placed 2 100 km 1 300 miles above 20 North by 100 West This projection results in a very wide angle presentation such as one might get with a fish eye lens and it does not include the whole hemisphere Black Marble 2012 edit nbsp Black Marble North and South America at night 39 Hurricane Sandy can be seen off the coast of Florida On December 5 2012 NASA released a nighttime view of Earth called Black Marble 39 during an annual meeting of Earth scientists held by the American Geophysical Union in San Francisco 40 The images display all the human and natural matter that glows and can be detected from space 41 The data was acquired by the Suomi NPP satellite in April and October 2012 and then mapped over existing Blue Marble imagery of Earth to provide a realistic view of the planet 42 The Suomi NPP satellite completed 312 orbits and gathered 2 5 terabytes of data to get a clear shot of every parcel of the Earth s land surface Named for satellite meteorology pioneer Verner Suomi the satellite flies over any given point on Earth s surface twice each day and flies 512 miles 824 km above the surface in a polar orbit 43 The nighttime views were obtained with the new satellite s day night band of the Visible Infrared Imaging Radiometer Suite VIIRS which detects light in a range of wavelengths from green to near infrared and uses filtering techniques to observe dim signals such as city lights gas flares auroras wildfires and reflected moonlight Auroras fires and other stray light have been removed in the case of the Black Marble images to emphasize the city lights 42 The images have been used to study the spatial distribution of economic activity to select sites for astronomical observatories and to monitor human activities around protected areas 42 DSCOVR edit This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources The Blue Marble news newspapers books scholar JSTOR September 2017 Learn how and when to remove this template message nbsp A color corrected image of the Earth taken by the DSCOVR satellite on December 7 2022 exactly 50 years after the original Blue Marble imageOn July 21 2015 NASA released a new Blue Marble photograph taken by a U S Deep Space Climate Observatory DSCOVR a solar weather and Earth observation satellite that was launched in February 2015 and provided a near continuous view of the entire sunlit side of the Earth The image was taken on July 6 2015 44 The photograph of the Western Hemisphere is centered over Central America The Western United States Mexico and the Caribbean are visible but much of South America is hidden beneath cloud cover Greenland can be seen at the upper edge of the image The EPIC science team plans to upload 13 new color images per day on their website The color balance has been adjusted to approximate an image that could be seen with the average human eye In addition to images scientific information will be uploaded as it becomes available after in flight calibration is complete The science information will be ozone and aerosol amounts cloud reflectivity cloud height and vegetation information The EPIC instrument views the Earth from sunrise in the west to sunset in the east 12 to 13 times per day as the Earth rotates at 15 degrees of longitude per hour Clearly visible are storms forming over the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans major slowly moving cloud rivers dust aerosol plumes from Africa the Sun s reflection in the oceans ship exhaust tracks in the clouds rivers and lakes and the variegated land surface patterns especially in the African deserts The spatial resolution of the color images is about 10 km 6 miles and the resolution of the science products will be about 20 km 10 miles Once every three months lunar images are obtained that are the same as those viewed from Earth during a full Moon On occasion the other side of the Moon will appear in the Earth images as the Moon crosses in front of the Earth Cultural reception editThe picture has been identified as one of the most widely publicised and influential images since its release particularly in the advocacy for environmental protection 2 3 Its reflection and of images from space in general has been in parts critically analyzed as distracting from human geographic issues and from being a technological product produced by a dominant spacefaring country which developed the image and its overview effect as a boundless worldview instead of as an image inviting an intricate and critical overview 45 46 47 See also edit nbsp Astronomy portal nbsp Oceans portal nbsp Space portal nbsp Solar System portal nbsp Spaceflight portal nbsp World portalDODGE satellite which took the first color picture of the complete Earth disk Earth phases from the Moon Earthrise another widely reproduced picture of the Earth taken in 1968 by Bill Anders aboard Apollo 8 First images of Earth from space Himawari 8 and 9 geostationary satellites that produce an image of the Earth s full face every 10 minutes in the daytime List of photographs considered the most important Pale Blue Dot a 1990 image of the Earth taken by Voyager 1 Pale Orange Dot a NASA digital model showing a possible early Earth Stewart Brand NASA images of Earth author who lobbied NASA in 1966 to release a satellite photograph of the entire Earth because he thought it would be a powerful symbol The Day the Earth Smiled Space selfie Whole Earth Catalog an eclectic catalog compiled by Brand which was inspired in part by photographs of the Earth as a globeReferences edit Apollo 17 Day 1 Transposition Docking and Extraction NASA 2022 Retrieved October 1 2023 By measurement of the size of Earth s image in these photographs 29mm they were taken at a distance of about 29 400 kilometres 15 900 nautical miles a b c d Petsko Gregory A April 28 2011 The blue marble Genome Biology 12 4 112 doi 10 1186 gb 2011 12 4 112 PMC 3218853 PMID 21554751 a b c d e f g Apollo 17 The Blue Marble Ehartwell com April 25 2007 Archived from the original on January 9 2008 Retrieved January 18 2008 Elegant Figures Crafting the Blue Marble earthobservatory nasa gov October 6 2011 Retrieved September 30 2022 Cosgrove Ben April 11 2014 Home Sweet Home In Praise of Apollo 17 s Blue Marble Time Archived from the original on June 1 2015 Retrieved December 7 2019 a b The Story of Blue Marble Images Part 2 CleanTechnica January 4 2022 Retrieved February 6 2022 From astronaut Schmitt stating that Earth was beneath them or to their nadir Mars Kelli December 17 2020 90 Years of Our Changing Views of Earth NASA Retrieved May 21 2021 a b c The Story of the Blue Marble CleanTechnica January 1 2022 Retrieved February 2 2022 Lunch with the FT Stewart Brand Financial Times January 8 2010 Archived from the original on December 10 2022 Retrieved May 22 2020 a b The Guardian Profile Stewart Brand The Guardian August 3 2001 Retrieved May 22 2020 Brand Stewart Photography changes our relationship to our planet Smithsonian Photography Initiative Archived from the original on May 30 2008 Retrieved November 6 2009 Brand Stewart 2009 Whole Earth Discipline An Ecopragmatist Manifesto Viking Adult p 214 ISBN 978 0 670 02121 5 Leonard Jennifer Stewart Brand on the long view Archived from the original on December 12 2007 Retrieved February 5 2013 Apollo Imagery NASA November 1 2012 Archived from the original on April 20 2019 Retrieved January 6 2018 March to the Moon March to the Moon Retrieved February 5 2022 Earth from Apollo 17 The Astrophoto Lab December 7 1972 Archived from the original on February 5 2022 Retrieved February 5 2022 AS17 148 22727 Gateway to Astronaut Photography of Earth NASA June 1 2019 Archived from the original on March 30 2017 Retrieved June 1 2019 AS17 148 22726 Gateway to Astronaut Photography of Earth NASA June 1 2019 Archived from the original on June 1 2019 Retrieved June 1 2019 a b Reinert Al April 12 2011 The Blue Marble Shot Our First Complete Photograph of Earth The Atlantic Retrieved August 1 2018 Apollo 17 Image Library Apollo 17 Multimedia NASA Retrieved April 29 2007 Worth a thousand worlds Geek Trivia TechRepublic December 6 2005 Archived from the original on April 13 2008 Retrieved June 23 2007 Gonzalez Sergi November 2020 The weather of the Blue Marble Weather 75 11 366 367 Bibcode 2020Wthr 75 366G doi 10 1002 wea 3831 hdl 20 500 11765 12609 ISSN 0043 1656 S2CID 225255076 History of Past Cyclones India Meteorological Department Archived from the original on September 25 2014 Retrieved September 16 2011 Das P K George C A Jambunathan R January 10 1972 Cyclones and depressions of 1971 Bay of Bengal and Arabian Sea MAUSAM 23 4 453 466 doi 10 54302 mausam v23i4 5305 S2CID 247037040 Lopez Philippe November 28 2020 Validating the Past Simulating the Weather in Space Mission Earth Views Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society 101 11 981 984 doi 10 1175 BAMS D 19 0254 1 ISSN 0003 0007 S2CID 212879930 Parker Phill Apollo 11 Hasselblad Cameras Apollo Lunar Surface Journal NASA Apollo 17 Index 70 mm 35 mm and 16 mm Photographs PDF Mapping Sciences Branch Johnson Space Center NASA May 1974 p 88 Berger Erin December 6 2017 The Mystery Behind Who Took the Blue Marble Photo Outside Online Retrieved February 6 2022 Apollo 17 AS 512 National Air and Space Museum Smithsonian Institution Archived from the original on January 16 2021 Retrieved January 30 2018 Kumar Abhay May 24 2013 Voices An anthem for the Earth The Kathmandu Post Archived from the original on July 17 2015 The Blue Marble True Color Global Imagery at 1km Resolution NASA Earth Observatory October 13 2005 Retrieved December 7 2009 Hormann Christoph May 30 2007 Earth renders using the Blue Marble 2002 data Imagico de Retrieved December 7 2009 Stockli Reto January 1 2005 Blue Marble Next Generation Blue Marble Research a b Stockli Reto October 13 2005 Blue Marble Next Generation NASA Earth Observatory Sheffield Brandon December 26 2007 Special Q Games on PS3 s Gaia Music Visualizer Gamasutra Most Amazing High Definition Image of Earth Blue Marble 2012 Flickr com NASA Goddard Space Flight Center January 4 2012 Retrieved February 12 2012 a b c VIIRS Eastern Hemisphere Image Behind the Scenes NASA February 2 2012 Archived from the original on February 11 2012 Retrieved February 12 2012 Blue Marble 2012 NASA January 25 2012 Retrieved February 12 2012 a b Cole Steve et al December 5 2012 NASA NOAA Satellite Reveals New Views of Earth at Night NASA Retrieved December 9 2012 NASA Photos Show Black Marble Earth at Night ABC News Radio December 5 2012 Archived from the original on July 24 2013 Retrieved December 9 2012 Samenow Jason December 5 2012 Satellites unveil Black Marble and spy on the moon The Washington Post Retrieved December 9 2012 a b c Black Marble Americas Flickr com NASA Goddard Space Flight Center April October 2012 Retrieved December 9 2012 Black Marble images shine light upon a sleeping world The Washington Post December 5 2012 Retrieved December 9 2012 Lendino Jamie July 21 2015 Humanity gets a new Blue Marble photo of Earth and it s stunning ExtremeTech Retrieved July 23 2015 Flores Teresa Mendes April 10 2012 The Global Imagination from The Blue Marble photograph to Google Earth Academia edu Retrieved October 22 2022 Biondi Charleyne January 21 2018 Haris A Durrani The Bogota Declaration A Global Uprising Uprising 13 13 Log In Blogs Columbia Law School Retrieved October 22 2022 Bimm Jordan February 1 2014 Rethinking the Overview Effect Quest The History of Spaceflight Retrieved October 22 2022 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to The Blue Marble NASA history of Blue Marble image releases1972 photograph edit Apollo Image Atlas Photos from magazine NN of the 70 mm Hasselblad camera used on Apollo 17 includes the Blue Marble photo and similar photographs Apollo 17 in Real time The moment the Blue Marble photo was taken in the context of the rest of the Apollo 17 mission A short list of places in which the image has been used21st century NASA composite images edit Blue Marble 2002 Blue Marble Mapserver Web interface for viewing small sections of the above Blue Marble Next Generation 2005 one picture per month Blue Marble Navigator Web interface for viewing local sections of the above incl links to other such interfaces download sites etc Blue Marble Next Generation in NASA World Wind Wired New Satellite Takes Spectacular High Res Image of Earth with link to 2012 Composite in Super High Resolution Earth at Night It s the end of the night as you know it you ll see fine NASA Earth Observatory site with various links around the 2012 and 2017 Black Marble images Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title The Blue Marble amp oldid 1205623760, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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