Image
Credit: Apollo 17, NASA; Restoration - Toby Ord
Our fair
planet sports a curved, sunlit crescent against
the black backdrop of space in this stunning photograph. From the unfamiliar
perspective, the Earth is small and,
like a telescopic image of
a distant planet, the entire horizon is completely within the field of view.
Enjoyed by crews on board the
International Space Station, only much closer views of the planet are possible
from low Earth orbit. Orbiting the planet once every 90 minutes, a spectacle of
clouds, oceans, and continents scrolls beneath them with
the partial arc of the planet's edge in the distance. But this digitally restored image presents
a view so far only achieved by 24 humans, Apollo astronauts who
traveled to the Moon and back again between 1968 and 1972. The original
photograph, AS17-152-23420, was taken by the homeward bound crew of Apollo 17, on December 17, 1972. For now it's the last
picture of Earth from this planetary perspective taken by human hands.