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Earthset and Ohm Crater
Earthset captured through the Orion Spacecraft window during the Artemis II crew’s flyby of the Moon. 
The dark portion of the Earth is experiencing nighttime. On Earth’s day side, swirling clouds are visible over Australia and Oceania. 
In the foreground, Ohm Crater on the Moon has terraced edges and a flat Floor interrupted by Central Peaks.
Artemis II’s historic lunar flyby on Monday was one of new milestones and spaceflight records, but it was also deeply resonant with the past. After flying farther beyond the Earth than any human has ever been before—beating the record set in 1970 during Apollo 13 by about 4,102 miles—and seeing parts of the moon no humans had ever witnessed, the crew recreated “Earthrise,” one of the most famous photographs of all time, with a small twist.

Instead of Earthrise, the Artemis II photo is of Earthset, capturing the surface of the moon and the crescent-lit Earth setting beyond it in the same frame.

In 1968, a year of global political unrest, the crew of Apollo 8 was on a similar flight around the moon, on a test of a spacecraft that would be used for future lunar landings. In an unplanned moment, crew member William “Bill” Anders snapped a photo of the Earth and the moon in the same frame. The photo, called “Earthrise,” would become iconic—inspiring the global environmental movement in the years before the establishment of Earth Day in 1970.
Parole chiave: Earthset

Earthset and Ohm Crater

Earthset captured through the Orion Spacecraft window during the Artemis II crew’s flyby of the Moon.
The dark portion of the Earth is experiencing nighttime. On Earth’s day side, swirling clouds are visible over Australia and Oceania.
In the foreground, Ohm Crater on the Moon has terraced edges and a flat Floor interrupted by Central Peaks.
Artemis II’s historic lunar flyby on Monday was one of new milestones and spaceflight records, but it was also deeply resonant with the past. After flying farther beyond the Earth than any human has ever been before—beating the record set in 1970 during Apollo 13 by about 4,102 miles—and seeing parts of the moon no humans had ever witnessed, the crew recreated “Earthrise,” one of the most famous photographs of all time, with a small twist.

Instead of Earthrise, the Artemis II photo is of Earthset, capturing the surface of the moon and the crescent-lit Earth setting beyond it in the same frame.

In 1968, a year of global political unrest, the crew of Apollo 8 was on a similar flight around the moon, on a test of a spacecraft that would be used for future lunar landings. In an unplanned moment, crew member William “Bill” Anders snapped a photo of the Earth and the moon in the same frame. The photo, called “Earthrise,” would become iconic—inspiring the global environmental movement in the years before the establishment of Earth Day in 1970.

0016-The_Orientale_Basin.jpeg 0015-In_the_Night.jpeg 0014-Earthset.jpeg 0012-The_Dark_Side-Artemis_2.jpeg 0000-The_Moon.png
Informazioni sul file
Nome del file:0014-Earthset.jpeg
Nome album:MareKromium / The Project Artemis
Valutazione (1 voti):55555(Mostra dettagli)
Parole chiave:Earthset
Copyright:NASA - Artemis II Mission
Dimensione del file:345 KiB
Data di inserimento:Mag 07, 2026
Dimensioni:3072 x 2048 pixels
Visualizzato:122 volte
URL:https://www.lunexit.it/gallery/displayimage.php?pid=32046
Preferiti:Aggiungi ai preferiti

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Paolo C. Fienga   [Mag 20, 2026 at 04:14 PM]
Una piccola considerazione ed una provocazione, nel contempo: a me pare (al di là delle solite sceneggiate dei finti "scienziati" e degli "space enthusiasts" - milioni, in teoria - e di qualche gridolino - pure quello farlocco - proveniente dalla Sala Controllo) che di questa Missione (teoricamente di Valore Storico), non freghi un belino a nessuno. O mi sbaglio? Chi vuol rispondere, si accomodi...

Un'ulteriore annotazione polemica: l'umanità si sta' scannando quasi ovunque e la miseria, salvo pochi eletti, avanza più o meno per tutti.
Io dico che un momento più sbagliato di questo, per lanciare Artemis II allo sbaraglio, i fenomeni di Pasadena non potevano sceglierlo. Ai tempi di Apollo c'era il Vietnam, è vero; ma il contesto socio-politico mondiale, comunque, era nettamente diverso. Non so. Ripeto: se volete, datemi un parere.

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