4

The First Image of Earth Taken from Outer Space

 1 year ago
source link: https://www.vintag.es/2022/02/first-photo-from-space.html
Go to the source link to view the article. You can view the picture content, updated content and better typesetting reading experience. If the link is broken, please click the button below to view the snapshot at that time.

The First Image of Earth Taken From Outer Space

This black-and-white image might not look like much, but it represent the first step towards the creation of a new field of photography. What looks like random patches of black, grey and white are actually the earth’s horizon as seen from above the planet’s atmosphere. This is actually the first photograph ever taken from outer space.

AVvXsEhEBFtVqx_OUkLeo7U66A4D5Y96IpM1fmV7v-9iCXVa10uEw87rfoyFnWkKGh89y2-Q5yiVazRkqEkm1yjL0UY0DwVXnf3FZ5RHGW-GREaMsg6jRy39o21btJrT30RnWQEdtcftraCuCXQNt-_PTahbgDC_x_zP2B_-Li0PYE_f_5ojRmx7nvplVS3W=w640-h506
First image of Earth from outer space, taken by the V-2 No. 13 suborbital spaceflight.
On October 24, 1946, not long after the end of World War II and years before the Sputnik satellite opened the space age, a group of soldiers and scientists in the New Mexico desert saw something new and wonderful—the first pictures of Earth as seen from space.
The grainy, black-and-white photos were taken from an altitude of 65 miles by a 35-millimeter motion picture camera riding on a V-2 missile launched from the White Sands Missile Range. Snapping a new frame every second and a half, the rocket-borne camera climbed straight up, then fell back to Earth minutes later, slamming into the ground at 500 feet per second. The camera itself was smashed, but the film, protected in a steel cassette, was unharmed.
Fred Rulli was a 19-year-old enlisted man assigned to the recovery team that drove into the desert to retrieve film from those early V-2 shots. When the scientists found the cassette in good shape, he recalled, “They were ecstatic, they were jumping up and down like kids.” Later, back at the launch site, “when they first projected [the photos] onto the screen, the scientists just went nuts.”
Before 1946, the highest pictures ever taken of the Earth’s surface were from the Explorer II balloon, which had ascended 13.7 miles in 1935, high enough to discern the curvature of the Earth. The V-2 cameras reached more than five times that altitude, where they clearly showed the planet set against the blackness of space. When the movie frames were stitched together, Clyde Holliday, the engineer who developed the camera, wrote in National Geographic in 1950, the V-2 photos showed for the first time “how our Earth would look to visitors from another planet coming in on a space ship.”

About Joyk


Aggregate valuable and interesting links.
Joyk means Joy of geeK