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The oldest image of the Earth

    
solar pillar of ice crystals asperatus aurore rainbow lumière zodiacale arche anticrepuscular
Solar pillar, a link between heaven and earth... Asperatus,
the new cloud...
The aurora and
its lines of light...
Rainbow and colors... The zodiacal light... Shadow of the earth or
the arch anticrepuscular...
     
automatic translation Automatic translation    

1966, Lunar Orbiter 1

    
astronoo    
Opposite, the oldest image never taken by the Earth since the outskirts of the Moon.
Indeed, the image was taken on August 23rd, 1966 by the vessel Lunar Orbiter 1, launched on August 10th, 1966 in 19:31 UT, conceived mainly to photograph the flat sectors of the lunar surface. This image was announced in the period as the image of the century by the journalists. This image was taken approximately two years before the mission Apollon 8, first mission to transport men beyond the ground orbit. Later if to be placed on orbit around the Earth, the vessel took the direction of the lunar orbit: it was the first time when a man saw the own eyes, the face hidden from the Moon.
This mission was also the occasion of the first celebration of Christmas in the space, on the occasion of which the equipage made a reading of the Book of the Genesis, diffused on the television.
 The vessel Lunar Orbiter 1 took the first two remote sights, of the Earth since the Moon on a total of 42 high resolution images and 187 images of average resolution.
The modern technology allows the recovery and the retouch of high resolution images of the former sources of data as the tapes of Lunar Orbiter 1.
Specifically, the work of recovery of this image was begun 20 years ago by Nancy Evans and finished recently by Dennis Wingo and Keith Cowing which lead this project.

* The images as that there, have more that an aesthetic value, they allow a comparison with the recent images of the Moon and can explain and show unexpected changes of the surface of the Moon, in the time.

 

earth moon

* The oldest image never taken by the Earth since the outskirts of the Moon, dates August 23rd, 1966 in 19:31 (UT).

     

Lunar Orbiter

    
astronoo    
Lunar Orbiter is one of five U.S. space probes launched by NASA between 1966 and 1967 to map out the surface of the moon.
The objective was to identify areas of future vessels landing of the Apollo program to complement the work already done by the probes Surveyor and Ranger. During these five flights, 99% of the soil of the moon was mapped with a resolution close to 60 meters.
Lunar Orbiter probes equipped with two cameras, a development system, a scanner and a system of play allowed to develop film and scan the film before sending images to Earth.
 Lunar Orbiter probes were the first to make photographs of the Earth seen from space.
The rising of Earth above the lunar horizon was photographed by Lunar Orbiter 1, while photographs of the whole Earth taken by Lunar Orbiter 5.
The five Lunar Orbiter probes have provided a total of 2180 high resolution photos and 822 medium-resolution photos. The five probes have crashed on the moon, on order from NASA before they exhaust their fuel.
It does absolutely had not jeopardize future Apollo ships, which would orbit the Moon. Lunar orbiter (source NASA).
 

Lunar obiter

 
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Astronomy - november 13, 2008

  
 
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