A year of Earth from a million milesWatch a full year of Earth’s sunlit side, seen from a million miles away by the DSCOVR spacecraft.
The camera on the DSCOVR satellite has recorded a full year of the sunlit side of Earth from its orbit about a million miles from Earth at Lagrange point 1. Lagrange 1 is a point in the Earth-sun system some 932,000 miles (1.5 million km) from Earth, where the the gravitational forces between the sun and Earth create a relatively stable place for a space vehicle to orbit. A spacecraft can orbit the Lagrange 1 point just as it can orbit a planet. Lagrange 1 lies far beyond Earth’s magnetic environment, making it a perfect place to measure the constant stream of particles from the sun, known as the solar wind, as they pass by. DSCOVR launched on February 11, 2105. A year ago – July 20, 2015 – NASA released the first image of the sunlit side of Earth captured by the spacecraft’s EPIC camera. NASA said this about DSCOVR’s EPIC camera:
Bottom line: Video shows a full year of Earth, seen from a million miles away by the DSCOVR spacecraft.
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