On August 23, 1966, NASA's Lunar Orbiter 1 made history when it captured this iconic view of a crescent Earth rising above the lunar horizon.
This represents the first good view of our planet from the distance of the moon, some 236,000 miles (380,000 kilometers) away.
달에서 바라본 초승달 모양의 지구 모습 본 사진은 1966년 8월23일 나사에서찍은 사진이여 지구와의 거리는 38만 킬로미터 정도 떨어져 있다
This classic blue marble view of Earth represents the most detailed true-color image of our entire planet to date.
Most of the images were seamlessly stitched together to create this mosaic view—snapped by NASA's Terra environmental satellite from 435 miles (700 kilometers) above.
지구의 원형 모습 지구로 부터 700킬로 미터 떨어진 곳에서 찍힌 모습이다
What look like sparkling jewels scattered across the night side of Earth are in fact the telltale signs of the expansion of people worldwide. The light pollutionfrom cities and towns, mostly across darkened North America and Europe, dominate this satellite image.
This global view of Earth's night lights was acquired by the Suomi National Polar-orbiting Partnership (Suomi NPP) satellite over 21 days in 2012, taking 312 orbits and collecting 2.5 terabytes of data to cover the entire surface of Earth.
지구의 야경 모습
Like a cosmic blue marble, Earth appears to hang in the space above the lunar surface in this historic portrait taken by Apollo 8 astronaut Bill Anders in December 1968.
Before this mission, no person had ever seen or photographed Earth from deep space, and this famous "Earthrise" view helped inspire an entire generation of environmentalists.
달에서 본 지구의 일출 모습
1968년 아폴로8호 위성이 찍은 모습이다