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The Last Time NASA's Voyager "Looked Back" At Our Solar System, This Is What It Saw Before it met the 30,000-50,000 kelvin wall at the edge of our Solar System, Voyager 1 took its final images.
Pale Blue Dot (as the image is known) represents our planet as a barely perceptible dot serendipitously highlighted by a ray of sunlight transecting the inky-black of space – a ‘mote of dust suspended ...
The Pale Blue Dot was captured 35 years ago today! Top Democrat Schumer backs Republican spending bill to avert shutdown Egg prices are rapidly falling so far in March What's Next For NBA ...
The Pale Blue Dot At 35: The Making Of An Iconic Photo The final image from Voyager 1 remains as iconic today as it was in 1990.
See that little dot up there, in the upper right of that photo? That’s the planet Earth, as photographed from about 3.7 billion miles away 35 years ago Friday, on Feb. 14, 1990.
Pale blue dot When asked how he manages to keep his ego in check when receiving praise and criticism, Graham refers to Carl Sagan’s book, The Pale Blue Dot.
Jenny Brundin/CPR News Sandy Swett, photographed in Moffat, Colo., in March 2024, holds the “Pale Blue Dot” image of Earth taken by the Voyager I space probe.
What is the ‘Pale Blue Dot’? 34 years ago we caught a glimpse from 3.7 billion miles The famous image was captured by Voyager 1 and both its significance and insignificance echoed by Carl Sagan.
A reimagined version of the famous Pale Blue Dot picture released in February 2020 helps humans reflect on where we stand in the universe.
A Love Letter to the “Pale Blue Dot” Thirty-four years ago, Voyager 1 captured one of science’s most iconic photos.