NASA's most requested photo, the ‘Blue Marble', turns 45

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It’s an iconic photo of our home planet: The wispy white clouds and ice caps swirling with the blues and tans of the land and sea – all standing in stark contrast to the blackness of space.  But you may not know the full story behind this unique view of Earth.

The so-called “Blue Marble” photo was taken on December 7, 1972 during the last Apollo mission to the moon. The Apollo 17 crew -- Eugene Cernan, Ronald Evans and Jack Schmitt – were five hours and 18,000 miles into their trip to the moon when one of them took the picture.

NASA credits the whole crew with the photo but Schmitt later said he thought he’d shot the actual image, using a 70-millimeter Hasselblad camera with an 80-millimeter Zeiss lens.

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Later during that mission, Schmitt became the only certified geologist (with a Ph.D from Harvard, no less) to visit the lunar surface. He and Cernan spent over 20 hours walking on the moon, more than any of the previous 10 astronauts.  

After his return to Earth, Schmitt was elected to the U.S. Senate, representing his native New Mexico.  

Cernan, meanwhile, became known as the last man – to date – to walk on the moon, offering his own quote as he climbed off the lunar surface for the last time: 

The Blue Marble photo, though, has proven to be the crew’s best known legacy.  NASA released the image on Saturday, December 23, 1972, and it made the front page of most newspapers over that long Christmas weekend.

Cornell University biochemist Dr. Gregory Petsko later explained that the photo’s release came during the beginning of heightened environmental activism of the 1970s, just two years after the first Earth Day.  The image, Petsko says, quickly became a symbol of the young movement.

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“Our whole planet suddenly, in this image, seemed tiny, vulnerable, and incredibly lonely against the vast blackness of the cosmos,” he wrote. “It also seemed whole in a way that no map could illustrate.”

NASA says the Blue Marble is the agency’s most requested image, and one archivist believes it is one of the most widely distributed images in human civilization.

Even though satellite images have now become commonplace in our lives – you can even watch a live camera from the International Space Station from your living room chair around the clock – the Apollo 17 crew knew their photo would always hold a special place in history.

“It’s because we’re earthlings,” Schmitt told 'Smithsonian Magazine' in 2002. “Even the first generation to settle on the Moon will think of the Earth as home.”

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Other facts:

Apollo 17's launch at 12:33 a.m. Florida time, was the only night launch of the mighty Saturn V rocket. It meant that Africa was in daylight during the early hours of the spacecraft's flight. And with the December solstice approaching, Antarctica was also illuminated.

This was one of the very first times that astronauts could see the entire Earth illuminated from that distance; previous missions had seen more4 of a crescent Earth. It was also the first Apollo mission trajectory put the south polar ice cap in view.

The image was technically taken upside-down from what we expect – because there is no up or down in the weightlessness of space. It’s usually turned 180 degrees to match our visual expectation of south being “down.”

The 1972 Tamil Nadu cyclone can be seen in the top right of the Blue Marble image. The storm had brought flooding and high winds to the Indian state of Tamil Nadu on December 5, two days before the photograph was taken.

LINK: More details from NASA