The multi-faceted band's new tune " Try Not to Die " played a few songs into the set, poetically employing Carl Sagan's ...
Less than two weeks after it was launched, NASA had Voyager 1 turn its cameras homeward ... his 1994 book on astronomy and philosophy, “Pale Blue Dot.” ...
the space probe captured astonishing images of planets like Jupiter and Saturn. In 1990, as Voyager 1 approached the edge of the solar system, NASA commanded it to take a “family portrait” of the ...
On February 14, 1990, NASA's Voyager 1 spacecraft captured one of history's most iconic images — a glimpse of Earth from 3.7 billion miles away. In that moment, humanity appeared as a speck, adrift in ...
The power of this image lives on. Voyager 1 is still going strong, over four times further away than when it took those iconic images. The Pale Blue Dot has also changed, but humanity might not ...
On February 14, 1990, Voyager 1 took the iconic 'Pale Blue Dot' photo of Earth from 3.7 billion miles away ... The sequence included the Sun and the planets Venus, Earth, Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, and ...
On Valentine's Day 1990, NASA's Voyager 1 spacecraft snapped what would become ... through an unrelenting sea of darkness — a "Pale Blue Dot" lost in a void. Carl Sagan — the astronomer ...
Nasa recently remembered a famous image of Earth as a mere pale blue dot in the distance. The famous photograph was taken in ...
The picture, known as the Pale Blue Dot shows Earth within a scattered ray of sunlight. Voyager 1 was ... 753,000 miles (1.212 million kilometres) from Saturn, and approximately 898.414 million ...