On this day 35 years ago, NASA's Voyager 1 spacecraft took a picture that changed how we see our planet. The iconic "Pale ...
This updated version of "the Pale Blue Dot," made for the photo's 30th anniversary in 2020, uses modern image-processing software and techniques to ...
Five years ago, NASA provided an updated version of the Pale Blue Dot. JPL engineer Kevin M Gill reprocessed the image with ...
"Pale Blue Dot" – one of the last photos taken by Voyager 1 – is still the most distant image of the Earth. Astronomer Carl ...
Earth's oceans may have been green for billions of years until the first photosynthetic organisms flooded our atmosphere with ...
Some cyanobacteria have pigments that specialise in harvesting green light to power their photosynthesis, which may be an evolutionary adaptation to a time when the oceans were iron-rich and green-tin ...
But Sagan and the JPL team felt humanity should see Earth’s vulnerability and that our home world is just ... on astronomy and philosophy, “Pale Blue Dot.” ...
This year is the 30 th anniversary of the Pale Blue Dot, the renowned photo of our planet taken by the Voyager 1 spacecraft from a great distance. Featuring Earth as a tiny dot against the vast ...
On Valentines Day in 1990, NASAs Voyager 1 captured the iconic ‘Pale Blue Dot image, showing Earth as a tiny speck from 3.7 ...
In that moment, all of humanity was captured in a ghostly fragment of a pixel swimming through an unrelenting sea of darkness — a "Pale Blue Dot" lost ... the history of our species lived ...