As the crew of NASA’s Artemis II mission shot around the moon on Monday—going farther from our world than any human has gone before—the astronauts had Earth on their mind. Looking at our home planet ...
When Apollo 8 commander Frank Borman first viewed the Moon’s far side from his spacecraft window in 1968, he was struck by its stark, lifeless appearance ...
When Apollo 8 rounded the moon in 1968, Bill Anders lifted a camera and changed how we view our planet. His famous “Earthrise ...
An image depicting Earth rising above a large lunar crater has been falsely ​described online as a photograph released by ...
As NASA's Artemis II mission completed its lunar flyby, the astronauts sent back a stunning image of the colorful Earth ...
The 1968 photo of our blue planet inspired the global environmental movement. Now, NASA hopes to recapture that magic on their 10-day mission.
Astronauts and robotic spacecraft have captured breathtaking photos of Earth from space for decades. See the best images.
NASA on Tuesday released a historic image of Earth dipping below the lunar horizon, more than 57 years after an iconic "Earthrise" image was captured by an Apollo 8 astronaut.
This iconic picture, taken by astronaut William Anders in 1968 as the Apollo 8 spacecraft circumnavigated the Moon, shows Earth peeking out from beyond the lunar surface. NASA On December 24, 1968, ...
For the first time since Apollo 17, humans returned to the Moon, not to land, but to glide past it in a breathtaking, tightly choreographed seven-hour flyby that blended science, emotion and history ...