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

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!

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
@coreyspowell Note that this is 180 rotated relative to the previous one. North is bottom left.
@martinvermeer @coreyspowell both were taken in the same orientation, which you can see at the NASA link. The preview in the post is rotated to the “correct” orientation.
@coreyspowell I felt that they should have mentioned the light source in the text - it's an omission that almost seems intended to provoke commentary.

@coreyspowell
Thanks for the clarification!

I’ve been to Sahara when the landscape around me was lit up by just stars and the full moon, but I never thought about the fact that all Northern Africa and much of the rest of the planet also was lit up.

Yet another obvious thing I did not think of…

@coreyspowell

Digital iso is a revolution. HDR, amazing capture.

@coreyspowell 1/4 second shutter speed at ISO 51200!

@peteriskrisjanis @coreyspowell

After 1969 once again the overview.
Haven't learnt then, won't now.

@coreyspowell really shows how much photography has improved since Apollo 17
@coreyspowell Weather satellite image of Caribbean and South American cloud formations about 8 PM Eastern last night. You can see the same clouds in the upper left of this shot. I find that so, so cool.
@coreyspowell what is that bright star in the top left? a planet maybe?
@coreyspowell
I wonder! What are flat-earthers thinking these days??

@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! 

@k37 @coreyspowell

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.

@coreyspowell Nitpick: the alt text is off because you rotated the image!
@coreyspowell Thanks for mentioning the auroras. Didn’t spot this at first glance.

As an aside, there's a fan-made tracker here:

https://artemis-ii-tracker.com

Artemis II Mission Dashboard

@vk6flab Or, you could see the pro version the Canadian Space Agency had already made:
https://artemis.cdnspace.ca/
Artemis II Tracker — Live Mission Control

Real-time mission control dashboard tracking NASA's Artemis II crewed lunar flyby. Live telemetry, DSN comms, orbit visualization, and crew activities.

Canadian Space
@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.
@sen I notice that sometimes the CSA one seems behind, to me, though not by a lot. More data is better! Think of how worlds ahead we are compared to folks at home wanting news about Apollo! @vk6flab

@coreyspowell
I love the auroras illuminating the atmosphere around the Earth.

But what is seen near the center of the image?

@Earl

A reflection in the capsule window.

@Earl @coreyspowell Just the reflection of the lights inside the craft.

@coreyspowell

at a safe distance it does seem beautiful

@coreyspowell What is the shiny thing on the South Atlantic Ocean?
@coreyspowell The atmosphere like a thin shell enabling and protecting all life on the surface which we are recklessly damaging.

@coreyspowell

What I see in this image is a little blue ball, that in all the reachable universe, is the sole place humanity (and so much else!) can ever *thrive*, without the intense use of inherently fragile and fallible high tech adaptations, if then. Yet, year by year the dominant civilizations here are so busy-- arrogantly destroying it's life-giving biosphere and the incredibly beautiful web of life that depends upon it. And all for greed. More, more more. When will it ever be enough?

@kitkat_blue @coreyspowell I totally agree with you. It will be enough when Planet Earth gives up or when someone destroys it to a point of no return. 😓
@coreyspowell Boring. We've seen this in 1968 #Apollo8.
@coreyspowell @inthehands Whenever I see these shots, I am reminded that we’re all astronauts. Our (sometimes) environmentally controlled craft is spherical in shape, moving through space at 67,000 MPH as it orbits the sun. We have some water and toilet issues, and many of us suffer from Outlook glitches, too.
@coreyspowell So glad they finally took a photo with stars visible. It's been a point of debate for way too long.

@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!

#Space #Artemis #Earth

@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.

@coreyspowell

BuT LoOk, iT's fLaT!!

@coreyspowell The most beautiful planet of the Universe!!! 😍
@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. :)

@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

@coreyspowell, see how flat it is?
Told ya.
@coreyspowell oh btw, the alt text doesn't match any more, seems like your upload of the image is rotated 180
@coreyspowell I know nothing about space so please help. If we have a gazillion satellites orbiting why can’t we see any?
@tompsettchris @coreyspowell They're too small. And (at the moment at least) they'e really pretty far apart from each other.
@coreyspowell For the last time, the Earth is round.
@coreyspowell Must be magical to see it in person. Kinda makes me sad I'll never get to.
@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.

@coreyspowell Amazing.

If only we would stop spending trillions of war and more on exploration.