Life in optical

perspectives, photography and astronomy

Flower

Posts Tagged ‘Earth’

When Earth really feels like a spaceship

It’s all about seeing our movement in space. The rotation is obvious – but then the Perseids add a wonderful sense of movement in one direction, and that’s exactly what it is: the Earth cruising through a dusty part of interplanetary space. Like driving through snowfall. The atmosphere is our windscreen but it’s not veery thick! Good thing the shooting stars themselves are no bigger than a grain of sand… :)


Joshua Tree Under the Milky Way from Henry Jun Wah Lee on Vimeo. Timelapse video of the Perseid Meteor Shower and the galactic core of the Milky Way as seen from Joshua Tree National Park. These were taken between August 12 and August 15, 2010. For more photos and words: Under the Milky Way. Gear: 5D Mk II, EF 16-35mm L. Settings: f/2.8, 6400 ISO, 20 second exposures. Music is Samskeyti by Sigur Ros

Our place in the Universe

Just let yourself be carried away…




Thanks to the American Museum of Natural History for this stunning video!

So close…

Astronomy gives perspective.

It’s written all over this blog. It’s one of the founding philosophies of my work, and a personal conviction.

But because we are human, and we have to be told certain things over and over again, sometimes the messages falls short of accomplishing the change – the acquisition of perspective – that it is supposed to achieve.

This morning I was listening to the July 17 episode of the Science@NASA podcast, with the appealing title: “Exploring the Moon, Discovering Earth”.

It is a piece about how the photographs of the Earth taken by the astronauts going to the moon were serendipitous, and about how they captured the collective imagination and inspired people all around the world.

I quote:

For the first time in history, humankind looked at Earth and saw not a jigsaw puzzle of states and countries on an uninspiring flat map – but rather a whole planet uninterrupted by boundaries, a fragile sphere of dazzling beauty floating alone in a dangerous void. There was a home worthy of careful stewardship.

The late nature photographer Galen Rowell described this photo as “the most influential environmental photograph ever taken.”

“It changed humanity’s entire orientation,” says Kristen Erickson of NASA headquarters in Washington, DC. ”




“The Blue Marble” photographed by Apollo 17 Astronauts on their way to the moon (Credit: NASA)

I’m loving it. This is exactly the message I keep telling everyone I meet, and they all understand it, even if it’s the first time they hear it.

And then, in a crash, the whole perspective going on here becomes – again – the exclusivity of certain nations and not others.

In his recent confirmation hearing to take NASA’s helm as administrator, former astronaut Charles F. Bolden Jr. said, “I dream of a day when any American can launch into space and see the magnificence and grandeur of our home planet.”

So close. So close to having learnt something from seeing the planet uninterrupted by boundaries. But not quite there yet.

And it doesn’t matter whether it was a briefing to the government or not, if you claim to change humanity’s orientation – and this does – you should include humanity in your dreams.

So yes, NASA, go back to the moon, by all means, and learn that lesson all over again, please!…