
NASA releases picture of ‘Earthset’ shot by Artemis crew
Al Jazeera
New NASA ‘Earthset’ photo from Artemis II echoes Apollo 8’s iconic “Earthrise” in historic lunar flyby.
NASA has unveiled a new historic view of our planet, releasing a photograph of Earth slipping below the lunar horizon more than 57 years after the iconic “Earthrise” image was captured by an Apollo 8 astronaut.
Members of the Artemis II crew took the shot from their Orion capsule during a record-setting flyby of the moon, consciously echoing the legendary “Earthrise” photograph taken by US astronaut Bill Anders in December 1968, during the first mission to carry humans around the moon.
The US space agency shared its new “Earthset” image on X, as did the White House.
“Humanity, from the other side,” the White House said. “First photo from the far side of the Moon. Captured from Orion as Earth dips beyond the lunar horizon.”
The four-member crew – US astronauts Reid Wiseman, Christina Koch and Victor Glover, along with Canadian astronaut Jeremy Hansen – are on a landmark journey looping around Earth’s natural satellite, part of a broader programme intended to pave the way for a moon landing in 2028.













