logo
Eclipse captured from moon's point of view as lander takes images during 'historic' event

Eclipse captured from moon's point of view as lander takes images during 'historic' event

Sky News15-03-2025

This week's eclipse has been photographed from the moon's point of view.
But rather than being the lunar eclipse that was seen from Earth, on the moon it was a solar eclipse.
The images were taken by a camera on board the unmanned Blue Ghost spacecraft which successfully landed on the planet earlier this month.
Operator Firefly Aerospace said it was the first time in history that a commercial company had operated actively on the moon during an eclipse.
In a total lunar eclipse, the Earth lines up between the moon and the sun, hiding the moon from sunlight.
On Friday, the moon turned red in an event known as a blood moon. The full lunar eclipse was visible from North and South America, while in the UK only a partial lunar eclipse was visible.
The first picture of the cosmic event from the moon shows the Earth beginning to block out the sun.
The solar eclipse can also be seen in a reflection of the lander's solar panel in the same picture.
In a caption on X accompanying the 14 March photo, Firefly Aerospace wrote: "BlueGhost" caught her first look at the solar eclipse from the Moon around 12.30 am CDT - notice the glowing ring of light emerge in the reflection of our solar panel as the Earth began to block the sun!"
A second image, captured from the landing site, shows the "diamond ring" as the sun is about to emerge from totality behind Earth.
A third photo showed the Blue Ghost turn a reddish colour during the event.
Firefly Aerospace said: "The red hue is the result of sunlight refracting through the Earth's atmosphere as the sun is blocked by our planet, casting a shadow on the lunar surface. The glowing ring of the eclipse is again seen on Blue Ghost's solar panel."
Blue Ghost's three solar panels have been powering the lander's research instruments for a 14-day mission on the moon.
The four-legged Blue Ghost, which is the size of a compact car, touched down on 2 March near an ancient volcanic vent on Mare Crisium, a large basin in the northeast corner of the moon's Earth-facing side.
It is carrying 10 scientific payloads and used 21 thrusters to guide itself to touchdown.
It has on board a vacuum to suck up moon dirt for analysis and a drill to measure temperatures as deep as 10 feet.
Firefly Aerospace became the second private firm to carry out a moon landing, though it declared itself the first company to make a "fully successful" soft landing.
Houston-based Intuitive Machine's Odysseus lander made a lopsided touchdown last year, landing mostly intact but dooming many of its onboard instruments.
Only five nations have been successful in soft-landings in the past: The then-Soviet Union, the US, China, India and Japan.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Strawberry Moon will appear red in sky for last time until 2043
Strawberry Moon will appear red in sky for last time until 2043

Wales Online

time20 hours ago

  • Wales Online

Strawberry Moon will appear red in sky for last time until 2043

Strawberry Moon will appear red in sky for last time until 2043 The moon will take on a strange appearance this week A red moon low on the horizon The full Moon this week will appear unusual for people across the UK thanks to a phenomenon that won't be seen as well again until 2043. June's full Moon is known as the Strawberry Moon because it is the time of year, in North America, when wild strawberries were harvested. And this year the Strawberry Moon will live up to its name and could take on a red tinge. ‌ That's because the Moon will be the lowest we will see until 2043 - staying close to the horizon after it rises as a full Moon on June 10 and 11. The fact it is lower on the horizon will mean that, to people looking from the UK, it will take on a red tinge. ‌ When the Moon hangs low on the horizon, its light has to travel through a much thicker slice of Earth's atmosphere than when it's overhead. That extra distance does two things: Rayleigh scattering: Molecules of nitrogen, oxygen, plus tiny aerosols in the air scatter short-wavelength light (violet, blue, green) far more efficiently than long-wavelength light (orange, red). The longer the light's journey through that haze, the more of the blues are stripped away, leaving mainly reds and oranges to reach your eyes. Article continues below Dust, smoke, and pollution: Close to the ground, the air contains more dust, water vapour, and human-made pollutants. These larger particles selectively absorb and scatter light, too, but they do it in a way that further mutes the blues and greens while letting the warmer colours through. Put those two effects together and the Moon takes on a coppery or crimson tint whenever it's near the horizon. The same physics explains why sunsets are red — and why a 'blood Moon' during a lunar eclipse looks red: all of the sunlight reaching the eclipsed Moon has been filtered through Earth's thick, dusty atmosphere at sunrise and sunset around the planet. Article continues below The name Strawberry Moon comes from Algonquin and other Native American traditions, as well as old European naming systems. It marks the start of the strawberry harvesting season in parts of North America. Early colonists adopted and passed on this term. For the UK, the full Strawberry Moon on June 11, 2025, will be best seen in the evening of June 10 at moonrise, rather than on the morning of June 11 when it's technically 100% illuminated. Moonrise on June 10 will be between 9pm and 9.30pm and the Moon will be full in the morning on June 11 at 8.43am - after sunrise. The Moon will trace its lowest path of the year, so rising at dusk on June 10 gives it its most dramatic and reddish appearance. At meridian transit (its highest point at night), it'll only reach about 10°–12° above the horizon - about two fists held above the horizon.

Chris Hadfield: ‘Worst space chore? Fixing the toilet. It's even worse when it's weightless'
Chris Hadfield: ‘Worst space chore? Fixing the toilet. It's even worse when it's weightless'

The Guardian

timea day ago

  • The Guardian

Chris Hadfield: ‘Worst space chore? Fixing the toilet. It's even worse when it's weightless'

What's the most chaotic thing that's ever happened to you in space? L​aunch – you go from no speed at all to 17,500 miles an hour in under nine minutes. The chaos is spectacular, the power of it is just wild, the physical vibration and force of it is mind-numbing – and it all happens so blisteringly fast. In the time it takes to drink a cup of tea, you go from lying on your back in Florida to being weightless in space. It's just the most amazing, chaotic, spectacular, rare human experience I've ever had. As an astronaut you have to master so many skills; have you ever not known something in space and wished you did? Onboard a spaceship, if you have an electrical problem, an attitude control problem, a propulsion problem, a computer problem – one of the first things you lose is communications with Earth. So it's really important to have all the skills on board. I served as an astronaut for 21 years and I was only in space for six months – that gave me 20-and-a-half years to not have to be surprised or flummoxed while I was in space. As an example, I qualified as an emergency medical technician. I worked in the cadaver lab [of Hermann hospital in Houston, near Nasa] to get familiar with the human body and then I worked in all of the wards of the hospital. I assisted a surgeon who was doing full abdominal surgery on an accident victim and then I worked in emergency, doing all the immediate triage. I had to get all of those skills just in case we had a medical problem on the spaceship. We take preparation really seriously so that we won't just be tourists up there. You've written six books; which book or author do you always return to? It depends which book I'm writing. I've written three nonfiction and three thrillers, and when I'm writing thriller fiction I tend to read that, because it gets your mind in the groove. I have lots of favourite thriller authors – Robert Ludlum, John D MacDonald and Jonathan Kellerman … I go back and read those, study how they make you feel so compelled. What about favourite sci-fi? [Growing up] I read Asimov and Arthur C Clarke. I got to spend a day with Arthur C Clarke – he came to the Kennedy Space Centre, I spent a whole day showing him the space shuttle and the launch site, and it was like a dream come true because he'd been one of my science fiction idols growing up. [In 2015] Ray Bradbury's family asked me to write an introduction for the Folio Society re-release of The Martian Chronicles – I'd read it once a long time ago but I'd forgotten just what an exquisitely good writer he was. The Martian Chronicles was written just after the second world war, so after the first two atomic bombs had been released and killed so many people but before the very first space flight. It was a really interesting moment in time – of both despair and disgust at human behaviour and then hope. And it's a beautiful book. How likely do you think it is that there is intelligent life in space? We have found no evidence but we know that every star has at least one planet, and our telescopes are so good now that we can actually find how many of those planets are close enough to Earth that they could support life as we know it, and it's around 5%. And so if 5% of every planet could sustain life, we can count the stars in the universe and [estimate] how many planets there are that could sustain life. And the number is staggeringly huge – it's like a quintillion of planets. So the odds are overwhelming that there's got to be life in other places … [But] it was only quite recently that life on Earth evolved – through time and chance – into multi-cellular life, and then complex life, and then to be self-aware and have intelligence. My conclusion is that life will be common: we'll find slime and scum all over the place. But intelligent life I think is exquisitely rare and I think we should internalise that and think about the level of responsibility that we should adopt. What's your favourite space movie? 2001: A Space Odyssey. I just find it fascinating and intriguing and a beautiful Stanley Kubrick adaptation of Arthur C Clarke's vision of things. It's very thought-provoking even almost 60 years later. I think The Martian is a very good movie and the Andy Weir book [it's based on] – I love that. I think Ron Howard did a beautiful job with Apollo 13 – it's almost a documentary. He worked so hard, he spent time with the astronauts, he filmed in a zero G aeroplane. Tell us your favourite fact. The most experienced astronaut in all of American history is a woman named Peggy Whitson. She's flown in space multiple times [and] been longer in space than any other American. She's commanded the space station twice. She's done 10 spacewalks and she's been the chief astronaut for Nasa. She's a tour de force. She's a good friend. She's a great person. Do you have a party trick? I'm a musician, I play guitar and sing – and I have the type of head that remembers lyrics. So my party trick is that I have probably 500 songs that I can play at any moment and know every single word and every single chord all the way from the start to the finish. It's just the way my brain works. It's kind of silly but it's really fun to be a human jukebox and have people say, 'Hey, can you play that song?' When I'm on stage in Australia, I'll have a guitar and I'll play a few songs. What's the worst space chore? Fixing the toilet. They break all the time. Being elbows deep in a toilet anywhere is no fun – it's even worse when it's weightless. And the trouble with our toilets is they have really nasty, poisonous chemicals and filters in them to try and process what's going through so that we can turn our urine and sweat back into drinking water, because we recycle about 93-94% of the water on board. What's the best lesson you learned from someone you've worked with? We were in the space shuttle simulator [with commander Kent Vernon 'Rommel' Rominger] and one of the crew members, Scott, had this cool and exciting idea. He came ripping up to the cockpit and plunked his laptop down to show him the solution to the problem and he knocked over Rommel's can of Coke – it flipped upside down and started emptying itself into all of his checklists. Rommel turned the can right side up and didn't say a thing. What this guy had come up with would be hugely important in the success of our mission. A little Coke spilled is unimportant – you can get more checklists. The natural reaction would have been, 'What the heck are you doing? Don't be so clumsy and look at the mess you made.' Instead, Rommel was like, 'Who cares? What I don't want Scott to think about next time he's got a great idea is, 'Oh, I gotta be careful I don't spill the commander's Coke.'' He should be excited about new ideas. And so, for me, it was a really great study of leadership. What song do you want played at your funeral? Danny Boy. It's a lovely reversal of how people normally look at death and who's grieving and why, and how you anticipate the grieving of death. It is an exquisitely and hauntingly beautiful song, and it's worth knowing the lyrics. Chris Hadfield's Journey to The Cosmos is touring Australia: Perth (27 June), Sydney (28 June), Brisbane (29 June), Melbourne (1 July) and Adelaide (3 July)

A look at the moon ahead of the lowest full moon of the year
A look at the moon ahead of the lowest full moon of the year

South Wales Argus

timea day ago

  • South Wales Argus

A look at the moon ahead of the lowest full moon of the year

That in itself is nothing unusual, but this particular full moon is generating quite a bit of interest by being the lowest full moon of the year as well as one of the furthest from the sun. Every year, the full moon is at its minimum altitude above the horizon in June. This is because it lies opposite to the sun, which, by contrast, is at its highest point this month as we approach the summer solstice. Because the moon's orbit is slightly tilted, it doesn't quite follow the same path as the sun and planets, that path being referred to as the ecliptic. The moon wanders slightly, travelling above and below the ecliptic, and this Tuesday reaches a point when it will be at its furthest southerly point, something that occurs every 18.6 years. This means that June's full moon will be at a point astronomers refer to as a 'lunar standstill' or 'lunistice'. The next time this will occur is June 2043. This all means that on Tuesday evening the moon will rise at around 9.30pm, but not achieve any great altitude, literally skimming the south-east horizon. Aside from the moon appearing very low in the sky and hardly climbing at all, the position where the moon rises and eventually sets will also be the closest points possible, rising in the southeast, then setting in the southwest. There's also the fact that this full moon is one of the most distant too, about 94,600 miles from the sun. For comparison, the average is around 93,200 miles. June's full moon, also referred to as the Strawberry Moon, given the ripening of the fruit at this time of year, will also be shining, (reflected sunlight), through the thickest layer of the Earth's atmosphere possible and may well appear golden in colour, perhaps orange, or even red. This is all down to the scattering of light to allow for longer wavelengths of colour to show through, like yellows and oranges. You may have noticed that when the moon is low down on the horizon it actually seems bigger than when it's high up in the sky? Well, in fact, it's not; it's a trick of the mind known as the 'moon illusion'. Photographs prove that there is no real difference in size between the moon when it is positioned low on the horizon or when high up in the sky, but this is not what we see, with an optical illusion created by how our brains absorb visual information. The illusion has baffled minds down the centuries with records of the seemingly enlarged Moon dating back to 4th century BC. Whilst there is no solid scientific explanation for the 'moon illusion', in reality, the moon's distance really doesn't change all that much, no matter where it is positioned in the sky. The International Space Station continues to have a rest from being on view in our skies. Send your astrophotography pictures to: thenightsky@

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store