Breathtaking View of Earth Taken by Russian Satellite
By OurAmazingPlanet Staff | LiveScience.com
The photo was taken by a Russian weather
satellite, called Elektro-L No.1, which flies in a geostationary orbit more than
22,000 miles (35,700 kilometers) above the Earth's equator.
The image was posted by James Drake on the Planet Earth website. Drake
obtained the photo from the Russian Federal Space Agency's Research Center for
Earth Operative Monitoring, which manages the Elektro-L No. 1 spacecraft, after
he expressed interest in animating and publishing them.
"In total I have an archive of 1,200 high-resolution images," Drake, who also
maintains a blog called Infinity Imagined, told OurAmazingPlanet in an email.
Elektro-L No. 1 scans the Earth in visible
and infrared wavelengths, observing natural phenomena and processes on the
surface of the planet, according to officials at the Russian Federal Space
Agency's Research Center for Earth Operative Monitoring. By combining different
wavelengths of light, the planet's lush features and dramatic colors are
emphasized. [Image Gallery: Earth as Art]
"When I see these images, I perceive the
planet we live on as incredibly beautiful, interconnected and alive," Drake
said. "They show the Earth for what it is, a spinning orb of metal and rock with
a thin surface layer of unimaginable complexity. The fluid water and air that
cover our planet are filled with intricate sel-replicating fractal patterns
called life. What is happening on this planet is absolutely extraordinary!"
The portrait is also a powerful reminder of how humanity is connected to the
cosmos.
"Just think about it, the atoms in your
body and everything on Earth were formed in the hearts of supergiant stars, cast
out in gigantic supernovae explosions, and condensed down into a small sphere
orbiting a star," Drake said. "To see the Earth when knowing that is to discover
yourself as a cell of a much greater being. You are an integral component of a
planetary consciousness that is travelling through a vast and beautiful cosmos."
Elektro-L No. 1 was launched into orbit on
Jan. 20, 2011, and is part of the Russian Federal Space Agency's new fleet
of meteorological satellites.
Savvy observers may recognize some similarities between Elektro-L's photo and
NASA's famous "Blue Marble" shot of Earth, which was recreated recently by
NASA's newest Earth-watching satellite, Suomi NPP, which was launched on Oct.
28, 2011.
Suomi NPP's stunning portrait was compiled
from images taken on multiple passes of the planet on Jan. 4, 2012.
These images are in good company with other
remarkable shots of Earth, including a celebrated view taken by the crew of
Apollo 17 in 1972, and photos taken by the workhorse Voyager 1 and 2 probes.
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