Just 14 days ago, amid the mundanity of East Coast commutes and West Coast alarm clocks, NASA’s Artemis II mission gave ...
A photo from 1968 inspired the first Earth Day, but that's not the only iconic space photo of Earth that everyone should see ...
In December 1972, NASA's final Apollo mission (Apollo 17) took the iconic "Blue Marble" photo of the whole Earth. Many, including science fiction writer Arthur C. Clarke, had expected that the sight ...
Firefly’s Blue Ghost lunar lander captures the Blue Marble while in Earth orbit approximately 6,700 km above the planet on January 23, 2025. Firefly Aerospace It’s been one week since the Firefly ...
For Earth Day 2026, NASA’s Artemis II crew released the first human-captured full-Earth images since the Apollo era, taken from over 100,000 miles away. The photographs, alongside global tributes from ...
Just in time for this year's Earth Day (22 April), we have a reminder of how the world looks. The most recent photo of ...
Firefly Aerospace's Blue Ghost moon lander caught haunting images of Earth while preparing to make its way towards lunar orbit. Blue Ghost launched on the "Ghost Riders in the Sky" mission on Jan. 15 ...
When I attended the very first Earth Day in 1970 as a college student, the air was choked with smog, Rachel Carson had ...
Today is Earth Day, and NASA is honoring our planet in a way that only NASA can. The agency took to social media to share a simple (yet mind-blowing) clip of our big blue marble, shot aboard the ...
The National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) has shared side-by-side pictures showing how our home planet Earth was captured on camera from space in 1972 by the crew of first Moon mission ...
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