By Iain Todd

Published: Thursday, 05 December 2024 at 13:00 PM


There’s a NASA spacecraft that gives us a view of the Moon we can never see from planet Earth.

Spacecraft offer us a unique perspective of the Universe, but they also offer a unique perspective of our own planet.

Only since the Space Age has humanity been able to see what it’s like to observe our home world from space, to confirm what Earth looks like from different planets and moons of the Solar System

What a solar eclipse looks like from space. The Moon’s shadow cast on Earth during the October 14 2023 annular solar eclipse, captured by NASA’s DSCVR (Deep Space Climate Observatory). Credit: courtesy of the DSCOVR EPIC team

One such spacecraft, the Deep Space Climate Observatory, or DSCOVR, was launched in February 2015, and made headlines recently for its image of the October 14 2023 solar eclipse from space.

It captures amazing images of Earth and the Moon, including videos of Earth passing behind and in front of the Moon.

Moon passing in front of Earth, in pictures

On 11 February 2021 the Moon passed between DSCOVR and the Earth, and NASA’s onboard EPIC (Earth Polychromatic Imaging Camera) instrument captured images of the event over a period of 3 hours.

You can see the event, showing the Moon passing in front of Earth, in the video below.