50 years ago, ‘Earthrise’ inspired the environmental movement

https://www.engadget.com/2018/12/24/earthrise-50-years-the-big-picture/


The most famous photo ever taken from space, Earthrise, is 50 years old today. It’s so iconic that we now take it for granted, but it may have had a greater impact on humanity than any photograph ever taken. Far from being planned, astronaut Bill Anders snapped it during the ground-breaking Apollo 8 mission on the spur of the moment. “Suddenly we saw this object called Earth,” Anders told the Guardian. “It was the only color in the universe.”

The 1968 Apollo 8 mission was crucial in the race to get a man on the moon. It was the first manned launch of the colossal Saturn V rocket, which had only flown twice before in unmanned test missions. It was also the first manned spacecraft to escape Earth’s gravity, reach another celestial body, and orbit it. It took nearly three days for the crew to reach the moon, and after a tense four minute engine burn — which could have flung them into space or crashed them onto the Moon’s surface –they successfully entered orbit.

The astronauts were equipped with a highly modified Hasselblad 500 EL with the reflex viewfinder replaced by a mechanical sighting ring. They were fully trained in its use and in photography principles and had access to both 70mm color and black and white film. Commander Frank Borman happened to be turning the command module when it came around on its fourth orbit on December 24th, and the Earth appeared as a blue jewel against the Moon’s drab monochrome surface.

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