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Apr 09, 2026

NASA’s Artemis II Delivers First ‘Earthset’ Photo, Reviving Apollo’s Legendary Earthrise

AI Summary
NASA released a historic “Earthset” image captured by the Artemis II crew from the Orion capsule as Earth slipped below the lunar horizon, echoing the iconic 1968 Earthrise photo and underscoring the mission’s role in preparing for a 2028 lunar landing.

NASA unveiled a historic photograph showing Earth disappearing behind the Moon’s edge, taken by the Artemis II crew aboard the Orion capsule during a record‑setting lunar flyby. The image, dubbed “Earthset,” arrives more than 57 years after the famed Apollo 8 Earthrise shot that first revealed our planet from lunar orbit.

The four‑person crew—American astronauts Reid Wiseman, Christina Koch, Victor Glover and Canadian astronaut Jeremy Hansen—captured the view on April 6, 2026, deliberately echoing Bill Anders’ December 1968 photograph. Their mission, part of NASA’s broader Artemis program, is designed to lay the groundwork for a 2028 crewed Moon landing.

After sharing the image on X, the White House highlighted its significance, noting it as “the first photo from the far side of the Moon, showing humanity from the other side.” The administration also posted a separate NASA picture of a solar eclipse observed during the flyby, describing it as “a view few in human history have ever witnessed.”

Beyond the Earthset, the Artemis II astronauts have provided detailed observations of lunar topography and reported witnessing a solar eclipse when the Moon passed in front of the Sun—an event rarely seen from that perspective.

The original Earthrise photograph, taken during Apollo 8’s ten lunar orbits, has been celebrated as one of the most influential images ever captured, featuring in Life magazine’s 2003 compilation “100 Photographs That Changed the World.” The new Earthset image adds a contemporary counterpart, reinforcing the enduring power of space photography to shape public perception of Earth’s place in the cosmos.