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Whole Earth
This image from Apollo 17, a
4/2/09
| Description |
This image from Apollo 17, and others like it, captured whole hemispheres of water, land and weather. This photo was the first view of the south polar ice cap. Almost the entire coastline of Africa is visible, along with the Arabian Peninsula. |
| Date |
4/2/09 |
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APOLLO 16MM ONBOARD SELECT V
This program contains select
4/14/04
| Description |
This program contains selected views taken from the Apollo 16mm onboards edited together and set to inspirational music. Footage from all Apollo missions, Apollo-Saturn 202 through Apollo 17, is used. Includes: stage separation, spacecraft rendezvous, various in-cabin crew scenes from spacecraft operations to leisure activities, Extravehicular Activity (EVA) views, full Earth and Moon views with close up views of the Moon, Earth rise over Moon horizon, Lunar Module (LM) descent, scenes from various EVAs on the Lunar surface, scenes taken during Command Module (CM) reentry including views of the main parachutes as CM makes final descent, views of the Lunar Roving Vehicle (LRV) and Lunar Module (LM), and a nice view of the planting of the American flag. |
| Date |
4/14/04 |
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APOLLO 16MM ONBOARD SELECT V
This program contains select
2/6/06
| Description |
This program contains selected views taken from the Apollo 16mm onboards edited together and set to inspirational music. Footage from all Apollo missions, Apollo-Saturn 202 through Apollo 17, is used. Includes: Launch, stage separation, spacecraft rendezvous, various in-cabin crew scenes from spacecraft operations to leisure activities, Extravehicular Activity (EVA) views, full Earth and Moon views with close up views of the Moon, Earth rise over Moon horizon, Lunar Module (LM) descent, scenes from various EVAs on the Lunar surface, scenes taken during Command Module (CM) reentry including views of the main parachutes as CM makes final descent, views of the Lunar Roving Vehicle (LRV) and Lunar Module (LM), and a nice view of the planting of the American flag. |
| Date |
2/6/06 |
|
APOLLO 16MM ONBOARD SELECT V
This program contains select
5/11/04
| Description |
This program contains selected views taken from the Apollo 16mm onboards edited together and set to inspirational music. Footage from all Apollo missions, Apollo-Saturn 202 through Apollo 17, is used. Includes: stage separation, spacecraft rendezvous, various in-cabin crew scenes from spacecraft operations to leisure activities, Extravehicular Activity (EVA) views, transposition views, Earth rise over Moon horizon, lunar landscape, Lunar Module (LM) descent, scenes from various EVAs on the Lunar surface including planting the American flag, views of the Lunar Roving Vehicle (LRV), and scenes taken during Command Module (CM) reentry including views of the main parachutes as CM makes final descent. |
| Date |
5/11/04 |
|
Schmitt with Flag and Earth
| Title |
Schmitt with Flag and Earth Above |
| Full Description |
Geologist-Astronaut Harrison Schmitt, Apollo 17 Lunar Module pilot, is photographed next to the American Flag during extravehicular activity (EVA) of NASA's final lunar landing mission in the Apollo series. The photo was taken at the Taurus-Littrow landing site. The highest part of the flag appears to point toward our planet earth in the distant background. |
| Date |
12/13/1972 |
| NASA Center |
Johnson Space Center |
|
Full Earth
| Title |
Full Earth |
| Full Description |
View of the Earth as seen by the Apollo 17 crew traveling toward the Moon. This translunar coast photograph extends from the Mediterranean Sea area to the Antarctica South polar ice cap. This is the first time the Apollo trajectory made it possible to photograph the South polar ice cap. Note the heavy cloud cover in the Southern Hemisphere. Almost the entire coastline of Africa is clearly visible. The Arabian Peninsula can be seen at the Northeastern edge of Africa. The large island off the coast of Africa is the Malagasy Republic. The Asian mainland is on the horizon toward the Northeast. |
| Date |
12/07/1972 |
| NASA Center |
Johnson Space Center |
|
NASA's Hubble Looks for Poss
| Title |
NASA's Hubble Looks for Possible Moon Resources |
|
NASA's Hubble Looks for Poss
| Title |
NASA's Hubble Looks for Possible Moon Resources |
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NASA's Hubble Looks for Poss
| Title |
NASA's Hubble Looks for Possible Moon Resources |
|
NASA's Hubble Looks for Poss
| Title |
NASA's Hubble Looks for Possible Moon Resources |
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NASA's Hubble Looks for Poss
| Title |
NASA's Hubble Looks for Possible Moon Resources |
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NASA's Hubble Looks for Poss
| Title |
NASA's Hubble Looks for Possible Moon Resources |
|
NASA's Hubble Looks for Poss
| Title |
NASA's Hubble Looks for Possible Moon Resources |
|
NASA's Hubble Looks for Poss
| Title |
NASA's Hubble Looks for Possible Moon Resources |
|
NASA's Hubble Looks for Poss
| Title |
NASA's Hubble Looks for Possible Moon Resources |
|
NASA's Hubble Looks for Poss
| Title |
NASA's Hubble Looks for Possible Moon Resources |
|
NASA's Hubble Looks for Poss
| Title |
NASA's Hubble Looks for Possible Moon Resources |
|
NASA's Hubble Looks for Poss
| Title |
NASA's Hubble Looks for Possible Moon Resources |
|
NASA's Hubble Looks for Poss
| Title |
NASA's Hubble Looks for Possible Moon Resources |
|
NASA's Hubble Looks for Poss
| Title |
NASA's Hubble Looks for Possible Moon Resources |
|
Apollo 17 30th Anniversary:
| Title |
Apollo 17 30th Anniversary: Andes Flyover |
| Abstract |
In conjunction with the 30th Anniversary Apollo 17 mission, NASA put together a special release highlighting one of the most popular photos taken during that mission. The photo (#AS17-148-22727) was taken on Dec. 7, 1972 from the Apollo 17 command module. Over the years, many other satellites have taken imagery of Earth, including Terra/MODIS. This animation uses a global mosaic derived from Terra/MODIS and flys us over the Andes Mountains to celebrate how far Earth science imagery has come since the days of Apollo 17. |
| Completed |
2002-11-21 |
|
Apollo 17 30th Anniversary:
| Title |
Apollo 17 30th Anniversary: Andes Flyover |
| Abstract |
In conjunction with the 30th Anniversary Apollo 17 mission, NASA put together a special release highlighting one of the most popular photos taken during that mission. The photo (#AS17-148-22727) was taken on Dec. 7, 1972 from the Apollo 17 command module. Over the years, many other satellites have taken imagery of Earth, including Terra/MODIS. This animation uses a global mosaic derived from Terra/MODIS and flys us over the Andes Mountains to celebrate how far Earth science imagery has come since the days of Apollo 17. |
| Completed |
2002-11-21 |
|
Apollo 17 30th Anniversary:
| Title |
Apollo 17 30th Anniversary: Andes Flyover |
| Abstract |
In conjunction with the 30th Anniversary Apollo 17 mission, NASA put together a special release highlighting one of the most popular photos taken during that mission. The photo (#AS17-148-22727) was taken on Dec. 7, 1972 from the Apollo 17 command module. Over the years, many other satellites have taken imagery of Earth, including Terra/MODIS. This animation uses a global mosaic derived from Terra/MODIS and flys us over the Andes Mountains to celebrate how far Earth science imagery has come since the days of Apollo 17. |
| Completed |
2002-11-21 |
|
Apollo 17 30th Anniversary:
| Title |
Apollo 17 30th Anniversary: Blue Marble European Fly-over |
| Abstract |
In conjunction with the 30th Anniversary Apollo 17 mission, NASA put together a special release highlighting one of the most popular photos taken during this mission. The photo (#AS17-148-22727) was taken on Dec. 7, 1972 from the Apollo 17 command module. Over the years, many other satellites have taken imagery of Earth, including Terra/MODIS. This animation uses a global mosaic derived from Terra/MODIS and flys us over Europe, Africa, and Asia to celebrate how far Earth science imagery has come since the days of Apollo 17. |
| Completed |
2002-11-21 |
|
Apollo 17 30th Anniversary:
| Title |
Apollo 17 30th Anniversary: Blue Marble European Fly-over |
| Abstract |
In conjunction with the 30th Anniversary Apollo 17 mission, NASA put together a special release highlighting one of the most popular photos taken during this mission. The photo (#AS17-148-22727) was taken on Dec. 7, 1972 from the Apollo 17 command module. Over the years, many other satellites have taken imagery of Earth, including Terra/MODIS. This animation uses a global mosaic derived from Terra/MODIS and flys us over Europe, Africa, and Asia to celebrate how far Earth science imagery has come since the days of Apollo 17. |
| Completed |
2002-11-21 |
|
Apollo 17 30th Anniversary:
| Title |
Apollo 17 30th Anniversary: Blue Marble Great Barrier Reef Fly-over |
| Abstract |
In conjunction with the 30th Anniversary Apollo 17 mission, NASA put together a special release highlighting one of the most popular photos taken during that mission. The photo (#AS17-148-22727) was taken on Dec. 7, 1972 from the Apollo 17 command module. Over the years, many other satellites have taken imagery of Earth, including Terra/MODIS. This animation uses a global mosaic derived from Terra/MODIS and flys us over Australia's Great Barrier Reef to celebrate how far Earth science imagery has come since the days of Apollo 17. |
| Completed |
2002-11-21 |
|
Apollo 17 30th Anniversary:
| Title |
Apollo 17 30th Anniversary: Blue Marble Great Barrier Reef Fly-over |
| Abstract |
In conjunction with the 30th Anniversary Apollo 17 mission, NASA put together a special release highlighting one of the most popular photos taken during that mission. The photo (#AS17-148-22727) was taken on Dec. 7, 1972 from the Apollo 17 command module. Over the years, many other satellites have taken imagery of Earth, including Terra/MODIS. This animation uses a global mosaic derived from Terra/MODIS and flys us over Australia's Great Barrier Reef to celebrate how far Earth science imagery has come since the days of Apollo 17. |
| Completed |
2002-11-21 |
|
Apollo 17 30th Anniversary:
| Title |
Apollo 17 30th Anniversary: Water Vapor in the Atmosphere |
| Abstract |
The motion of water vapor in the Earth's atmosphere collected from the GOES series of Earth-observing satellites. |
| Completed |
2002-11-22 |
|
Apollo 17 30th Anniversary:
| Title |
Apollo 17 30th Anniversary: Water Vapor in the Atmosphere |
| Abstract |
The motion of water vapor in the Earth's atmosphere collected from the GOES series of Earth-observing satellites. |
| Completed |
2002-11-22 |
|
Apollo 17 30th Anniversary:
| Title |
Apollo 17 30th Anniversary: Water Vapor in the Atmosphere |
| Abstract |
The motion of water vapor in the Earth's atmosphere collected from the GOES series of Earth-observing satellites. |
| Completed |
2002-11-22 |
|
Apollo 17 30th Anniversary:
| Title |
Apollo 17 30th Anniversary: View of the Earth's Surface |
| Abstract |
A tour of Earth imagery collected from the orbiting Terra/MODIS instrument. |
| Completed |
2002-11-22 |
|
Apollo 17 30th Anniversary:
| Title |
Apollo 17 30th Anniversary: View of the Earth's Surface |
| Abstract |
A tour of Earth imagery collected from the orbiting Terra/MODIS instrument. |
| Completed |
2002-11-22 |
|
Apollo 17 30th Anniversary:
| Title |
Apollo 17 30th Anniversary: View of the Earth's Surface |
| Abstract |
A tour of Earth imagery collected from the orbiting Terra/MODIS instrument. |
| Completed |
2002-11-22 |
|
Apollo 17 30th Anniversary:
| Title |
Apollo 17 30th Anniversary: Blue Marble Drift-in |
| Abstract |
In conjunction with the 30th Anniversary Apollo 17 mission, NASA put together a special release highlighting one of the most popular photos taken during this mission. The photo (#AS17-148-22727) was taken on Dec. 7, 1972 from the Apollo 17 command module. It was the first full Earth photograph revealing the Antarctic continent. Over the years, many other satellites have taken imagery of Earth, including Terra/MODIS. This animation uses a global mosaic derived from Terra/MODIS. As a tribute to its predecessor, this Blue Marble data set has been aligned to the same angle and pitch that the famous Apollo 17 photograph was taken. |
| Completed |
2002-11-21 |
|
Apollo 17 30th Anniversary:
| Title |
Apollo 17 30th Anniversary: Blue Marble Drift-in |
| Abstract |
In conjunction with the 30th Anniversary Apollo 17 mission, NASA put together a special release highlighting one of the most popular photos taken during this mission. The photo (#AS17-148-22727) was taken on Dec. 7, 1972 from the Apollo 17 command module. It was the first full Earth photograph revealing the Antarctic continent. Over the years, many other satellites have taken imagery of Earth, including Terra/MODIS. This animation uses a global mosaic derived from Terra/MODIS. As a tribute to its predecessor, this Blue Marble data set has been aligned to the same angle and pitch that the famous Apollo 17 photograph was taken. |
| Completed |
2002-11-21 |
|
Apollo 17 30th Anniversary:
| Title |
Apollo 17 30th Anniversary: Blue Marble Italian Fly-over |
| Abstract |
In conjunction with the 30th Anniversary Apollo 17 mission, NASA put together a special release highlighting one of the most popular photos taken during that mission. The photo (#AS17-148-22727) was taken on Dec. 7, 1972 from the Apollo 17 command module. Over the years, many other satellites have taken imagery of Earth, including Terra/MODIS. This animation uses a global mosaic derived from Terra/MODIS and flys us over Italy to celebrate how far Earth science imagery has come since the days of Apollo 17. |
| Completed |
2002-11-21 |
|
Apollo 17 30th Anniversary:
| Title |
Apollo 17 30th Anniversary: Blue Marble Italian Fly-over |
| Abstract |
In conjunction with the 30th Anniversary Apollo 17 mission, NASA put together a special release highlighting one of the most popular photos taken during that mission. The photo (#AS17-148-22727) was taken on Dec. 7, 1972 from the Apollo 17 command module. Over the years, many other satellites have taken imagery of Earth, including Terra/MODIS. This animation uses a global mosaic derived from Terra/MODIS and flys us over Italy to celebrate how far Earth science imagery has come since the days of Apollo 17. |
| Completed |
2002-11-21 |
|
Apollo 17 30th Anniversary:
| Title |
Apollo 17 30th Anniversary: Blue Marble Italian Fly-over |
| Abstract |
In conjunction with the 30th Anniversary Apollo 17 mission, NASA put together a special release highlighting one of the most popular photos taken during that mission. The photo (#AS17-148-22727) was taken on Dec. 7, 1972 from the Apollo 17 command module. Over the years, many other satellites have taken imagery of Earth, including Terra/MODIS. This animation uses a global mosaic derived from Terra/MODIS and flys us over Italy to celebrate how far Earth science imagery has come since the days of Apollo 17. |
| Completed |
2002-11-21 |
|
Apollo 17 30th Anniversary:
| Title |
Apollo 17 30th Anniversary: Blue Marble Himalayan Fly-over |
| Abstract |
In conjunction with the 30th Anniversary Apollo 17 mission, NASA put together a special release highlighting one of the most popular photos taken during that mission. The photo (#AS17-148-22727) was taken on Dec. 7, 1972 from the Apollo 17 command module. Over the years, many other satellites have taken imagery of Earth, including Terra/MODIS. This animation uses a global mosaic derived from Terra/MODIS and flys us over the Himalayan Mountains to celebrate how far Earth science imagery has come since the days of Apollo 17. |
| Completed |
2002-11-21 |
|
Apollo 17 30th Anniversary:
| Title |
Apollo 17 30th Anniversary: Blue Marble Himalayan Fly-over |
| Abstract |
In conjunction with the 30th Anniversary Apollo 17 mission, NASA put together a special release highlighting one of the most popular photos taken during that mission. The photo (#AS17-148-22727) was taken on Dec. 7, 1972 from the Apollo 17 command module. Over the years, many other satellites have taken imagery of Earth, including Terra/MODIS. This animation uses a global mosaic derived from Terra/MODIS and flys us over the Himalayan Mountains to celebrate how far Earth science imagery has come since the days of Apollo 17. |
| Completed |
2002-11-21 |
|
Apollo 17 30th Anniversary:
| Title |
Apollo 17 30th Anniversary: Blue Marble Himalayan Fly-over |
| Abstract |
In conjunction with the 30th Anniversary Apollo 17 mission, NASA put together a special release highlighting one of the most popular photos taken during that mission. The photo (#AS17-148-22727) was taken on Dec. 7, 1972 from the Apollo 17 command module. Over the years, many other satellites have taken imagery of Earth, including Terra/MODIS. This animation uses a global mosaic derived from Terra/MODIS and flys us over the Himalayan Mountains to celebrate how far Earth science imagery has come since the days of Apollo 17. |
| Completed |
2002-11-21 |
|
Apollo 17 30th Anniversary:
| Title |
Apollo 17 30th Anniversary: Earth photo Drift-in |
| Abstract |
The Apollo 17 spacecraft was launched from the Kennedy Space Center at midnight on December 7th, 1972. Just hours after lift-off, the command module aligned with the Earth and Sun, allowing the crew to photograph Earth in full light. For the first time in an Apollo mission, the Antarctic continent was visible allowing for a photo to be taken by the orbiting astronauts. The photo was taken at about 18,000 statute miles away from Earth. Virtually every picture showing the full Earth is derived from this one photograph. Television, newspapers, websites, and marketing material have all used this photograph over the years. Geostationary weather satellites, Galileo, and many other spacecraft have returned great pictures of the full Earth from space, but this image is still the number one requested photo in the NASA photo archives. |
| Completed |
2002-11-21 |
|
Apollo 17 30th Anniversary:
| Title |
Apollo 17 30th Anniversary: Earth photo Drift-in |
| Abstract |
The Apollo 17 spacecraft was launched from the Kennedy Space Center at midnight on December 7th, 1972. Just hours after lift-off, the command module aligned with the Earth and Sun, allowing the crew to photograph Earth in full light. For the first time in an Apollo mission, the Antarctic continent was visible allowing for a photo to be taken by the orbiting astronauts. The photo was taken at about 18,000 statute miles away from Earth. Virtually every picture showing the full Earth is derived from this one photograph. Television, newspapers, websites, and marketing material have all used this photograph over the years. Geostationary weather satellites, Galileo, and many other spacecraft have returned great pictures of the full Earth from space, but this image is still the number one requested photo in the NASA photo archives. |
| Completed |
2002-11-21 |
|
Apollo 17 30th Anniversary:
| Title |
Apollo 17 30th Anniversary: Earth photo Drift-in |
| Abstract |
The Apollo 17 spacecraft was launched from the Kennedy Space Center at midnight on December 7th, 1972. Just hours after lift-off, the command module aligned with the Earth and Sun, allowing the crew to photograph Earth in full light. For the first time in an Apollo mission, the Antarctic continent was visible allowing for a photo to be taken by the orbiting astronauts. The photo was taken at about 18,000 statute miles away from Earth. Virtually every picture showing the full Earth is derived from this one photograph. Television, newspapers, websites, and marketing material have all used this photograph over the years. Geostationary weather satellites, Galileo, and many other spacecraft have returned great pictures of the full Earth from space, but this image is still the number one requested photo in the NASA photo archives. |
| Completed |
2002-11-21 |
|
Apollo 17 30th Anniversary:
| Title |
Apollo 17 30th Anniversary: Saudi Arabia Zoom-out |
| Abstract |
The Apollo 17 spacecraft was launched from the Kennedy Space Center at midnight on December 7th, 1972. Just hours after lift-off, the command module aligned with the Earth and Sun, allowing the crew to photograph Earth in full light. The photo was taken at about 18,000 statute miles away from the Earth. Virtually every picture showing the full Earth is derived from this one photograph. Television, newspapers, websites, and marketing material have all used this photograph over the years. Geostationary weather satellites, Galileo, and many other spacecraft have returned great pictures of the full Earth from space, but this image is still the number one requested photo in the NASA photo archives. |
| Completed |
2002-11-21 |
|
Apollo 17 30th Anniversary:
| Title |
Apollo 17 30th Anniversary: Saudi Arabia Zoom-out |
| Abstract |
The Apollo 17 spacecraft was launched from the Kennedy Space Center at midnight on December 7th, 1972. Just hours after lift-off, the command module aligned with the Earth and Sun, allowing the crew to photograph Earth in full light. The photo was taken at about 18,000 statute miles away from the Earth. Virtually every picture showing the full Earth is derived from this one photograph. Television, newspapers, websites, and marketing material have all used this photograph over the years. Geostationary weather satellites, Galileo, and many other spacecraft have returned great pictures of the full Earth from space, but this image is still the number one requested photo in the NASA photo archives. |
| Completed |
2002-11-21 |
|
Hubble Space Telescope Looks
| Title |
Hubble Space Telescope Looks at the Moon to Prospect for Resources (Apollo 17 Landing Region) |
| Abstract |
The Hubble Space Telescope looked at specific areas of the moon prospecting for important minerals that may aid future sustained human presence on the moon. Initial analysis of the data indicate the likely presence of titanium and iron oxides. These minerals can be sources of oxygen, essential for human exploration. This visualization starts with a view of the moon as seen from Earth using a USGS Apollo derived artist rendered texture (airbrushed). The camera then zooms into the Apollo 17 landing region using Clementine data (the outer area after the camera pauses), high resolution HST data (the inner area), and Apollo 17 derived topgraphy. Exposure Time: 2.5 minutes Filters: F250W (250nm), F344N (344nm), F502N (502nm), F658N (658nm) Data from these multiple filters were used to produce the mosaic Apollo 17 landing site image. |
| Completed |
2005-10-12 |
|
Hubble Space Telescope Looks
| Title |
Hubble Space Telescope Looks at the Moon to Prospect for Resources (Apollo 17 Landing Region) |
| Abstract |
The Hubble Space Telescope looked at specific areas of the moon prospecting for important minerals that may aid future sustained human presence on the moon. Initial analysis of the data indicate the likely presence of titanium and iron oxides. These minerals can be sources of oxygen, essential for human exploration. This visualization starts with a view of the moon as seen from Earth using a USGS Apollo derived artist rendered texture (airbrushed). The camera then zooms into the Apollo 17 landing region using Clementine data (the outer area after the camera pauses), high resolution HST data (the inner area), and Apollo 17 derived topgraphy. Exposure Time: 2.5 minutes Filters: F250W (250nm), F344N (344nm), F502N (502nm), F658N (658nm) Data from these multiple filters were used to produce the mosaic Apollo 17 landing site image. |
| Completed |
2005-10-12 |
|
Apollo 17 30th Anniversary:
| Title |
Apollo 17 30th Anniversary: Antarctica Zoom-out |
| Abstract |
The Apollo 17 spacecraft was launched from the Kennedy Space Center at midnight on December 7th, 1972. Just hours after lift-off, the command module aligned with the Earth and Sun, allowing the crew to photograph Earth in full light. For the first time in an Apollo mission, the Antarctic continent was visible allowing for a photo to be taken by the orbiting astronauts. The photo was taken at about 18,000 statute miles away from Earth. Virtually every picture showing the full Earth is derived from this one photograph. Television, newspapers, websites, and marketing material have all used this photograph over the years. Geostationary weather satellites, Galileo, and many other spacecraft have returned great pictures of the full Earth from space, but this image is still the number one requested photo in the NASA photo archives. |
| Completed |
2002-11-21 |
|
Apollo 17 30th Anniversary:
| Title |
Apollo 17 30th Anniversary: Antarctica Zoom-out |
| Abstract |
The Apollo 17 spacecraft was launched from the Kennedy Space Center at midnight on December 7th, 1972. Just hours after lift-off, the command module aligned with the Earth and Sun, allowing the crew to photograph Earth in full light. For the first time in an Apollo mission, the Antarctic continent was visible allowing for a photo to be taken by the orbiting astronauts. The photo was taken at about 18,000 statute miles away from Earth. Virtually every picture showing the full Earth is derived from this one photograph. Television, newspapers, websites, and marketing material have all used this photograph over the years. Geostationary weather satellites, Galileo, and many other spacecraft have returned great pictures of the full Earth from space, but this image is still the number one requested photo in the NASA photo archives. |
| Completed |
2002-11-21 |
|
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