In 1947, before Sputnik ushered in the space age, scientists conducting the Small Steps Program in New Mexico pieced together these first images of Earth taken by a camera on a V-2 rocket more than 100 miles in space. Prior to the V-2 rocket launches, the highest point for making Earth images was 13.7 miles from the Explorer II balloon in 1935.

This first image of weather systems over the entire sunlit side of Earth is made up of 450 images taken by TIROS-9 over a 24-hour period on Feb. 13, 1965. During each 2-hour orbit, two television cameras sent images to radio ground stations in Alaska and Virginia, which then relayed the data to Washington where they were converted into pictures.


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The Applications Technology Satellite (ATS-1) carried a black-and-white weather camera which transmitted the first full-disk Earth images from geosynchronous orbit. On Dec. 22, 1966, ATS-1 captured this image of Earth and the Moon together. ATS-1 was 22,300 miles from Earth and more than 270,000 from the Moon when the photo was taken.

The Copernicus Program is an ambitious initiative headed by the European Commission in partnership with the European Space Agency (ESA). The Sentinels include all-weather radar images from Sentinel-1A and -1B, high-resolution optical images from Sentinel 2A and 2B, as well as ocean and land data suitable for environmental and climate monitoring from Sentinel 3.

The Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS) sensors on NASA's Terra and Aqua satellites have been acquiring images of the Earth daily since 1999, including daily imagery, 16-day BRDF-adjusted surface reflectance, and derived products such as vegetation indices and snow cover.

Welcome to the Image Section of the MODIS Web, where you can view the very latest in MODIS imagery as well as search an image collection that has been growing ever since MODIS first started acquiring data in February of 2000. 

 

 The MODIS Image of the Day section highlights a new MODIS image every day. After a week, Images of the Day become part of the Image Gallery, which is powered by NASA's Visible Earth image archive. The Image Gallery opens in a new browser window, where you can preview and search thousands of archived MODIS images.

The following is a listing of pictures electronically placed on the phonograph records which are carried onboard the Voyager 1 and 2 spacecraft. The contents of the record were selected for NASA by a committee chaired by Carl Sagan of Cornell University, et. al. Dr. Sagan and his associates assembled 115 images and a variety of natural sounds, such as those made by surf, wind and thunder, birds, whales, and other animals. To this they added musical selections from different cultures and eras, and spoken greetings from Earth-people in fifty-five languages, and printed messages from President Carter and U.N. Secretary General Waldheim. Each record is encased in a protective aluminum jacket, together with a cartridge and a needle. Instructions, in symbolic language, explain the origin of the spacecraft and indicate how the record is to be played. The 115 images are encoded in analog form. The remainder of the record is in audio, designed to be played at 16-2/3 revolutions per minute. It contains the spoken greetings, beginning with Akkadian, which was spoken in Sumer about six thousand years ago, and ending with Wu, a modern Chinese dialect. Following the section on the sounds of Earth, there is an eclectic 90-minute selection of music, including both Eastern and Western classics and a variety of ethnic music. Once the Voyager spacecraft leave the solar system, they will find themselves in empty space. It will be forty thousand years before they make a close approach to any other planetary system.

Credit: National Astronomy and Ionosphere Center, Cornell University (NAIC)

Please note that these images are copyright protected. Reproduction without permission of the copyright holder is prohibited.

The diagram of male and female image is one of the pictures electronically placed on the phonograph records which are carried onboard the Voyager 1 and 2 spacecraft.Credit: Jon Lomberg

Please note that these images are copyright protected. Reproduction without permission of the copyright holder is prohibited.

This page is a collection of map images of the Earth, created fromseveral different data sources. Some of the images are interestingin themselves, others are useful for compositing with other maps, asmasks or overlays. All of the images are in a cylindrical (latitude/longitude)projection.

Note: All of the images on this page were created by Dave Pape, while a federal employee at NASA/GSFC. They are therefore copyright-free.See the officialNASA guidelinesif you want more detailed legalese.You're free to use them however you wish, but if you publish anythingsignificant using them (websites, videos, articles, etc), I'denjoy hearing about it.

Mine is a simple operation of viewing satellite images in Google Earth Engine. I would like to view Sentinel 2 TOA images on GEE but clipped to a bounding box on the map. So I create the bounding box on the GEE map and saved it as a feature collection with a variable name machakos - place in my country.

Problem is, both var sentinel which contains the full satellite tile and the hopefully clipped var macha tile both appear black in the GEE map. I even tried putting in min: 0 and max: 0.3 parameters to no avail (both appear when min max values are input). I thought I was doing everthing right. If the var sentinel could have appeared, I would know its a problem on my part somewhere but both being white, I am clueless. This has been the same experience with landsat images.

The three astronauts, the first crewmembers to visit Tianhe, have been aboard the module since June 17. The crew have completed two extravehicular activities (EVAs), or spacewalks, and carried out a range of experiments, but China's human spaceflight agency has only recently released images taken by the astronauts.

A first batch of images taken by Tang Hongbo and released in August include views from space of the Gulf of Guinea, lights illuminating north Africa, the Ethiopian Highlands and Indian Ocean, as well as Tang's sleeping quarters. Shenzhou 12 commander Nie Haisheng also sent back images of Beijing at night and a section of the Pacific Ocean.

Other images provide a first glimpse at the windows on Tianhe, as well as a look at the solar panels that provide electrical power for the orbital facility. The photo of Tang's sleeping quarters shows the sleeping bags that keep the astronauts secure in microgravity while they doze.

A second batch of images released on Sept. 8 include pics snapped by astronaut Liu Boming. These include Lake Urmia in Iran, China's Kizilsu Kyrgyz Autonomous Prefecture, Lake Van in Turkey and the Armenian highlands, and a view of South Africa.

Andrew is a freelance space journalist with a focus on reporting on China's rapidly growing space sector. He began writing for Space.com in 2019 and writes for SpaceNews, IEEE Spectrum, National Geographic, Sky & Telescope, New Scientist and others. Andrew first caught the space bug when, as a youngster, he saw Voyager images of other worlds in our solar system for the first time. Away from space, Andrew enjoys trail running in the forests of Finland. You can follow him on Twitter @AJ_FI.

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] Taken by the crew of the Apollo 17 spacecraft on its way to the Moon, it is one of the most reproduced images in history.[2][3] The image has the official NASA designation AS17-148-22727.

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, taken on December 7, 1972,[5] is one of the most widely distributed photographic images in existence.[3] The astronauts had the Sun above[6] them when they took the image. To the astronauts, the Earth had the appearance and size of a glass marble.

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]

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. ff782bc1db

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