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Earthset and a solar eclipse: Nasa releases first images from Moon fly-by

The first two images show an 'Earthrise' and the solar eclipse the astronauts viewed.

Published April 7, 2026, 2:10 PM
Updated April 7, 2026, 2:20 PM1.3K
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Earthset and a solar eclipse: Nasa releases first images from Moon fly-by

Earthset and a solar eclipse: Nasa releases first images from Moon fly-by

Greg BrosnanBBC Climate and Science team

NASA Image of Earthrise poking out over the surface of the moonNASA

'Earthrise'

Nasa has released the first photographs taken by the Artemis II astronauts during their fly-by of the Moon.

The first image shows an 'Earthset' as the astronauts glimpsed our home planet peaking out beyond a cratered lunar landscape.

The second photograph shows the spectacular solar eclipse to which the astronauts were treated as the Moon blocked out the Sun.

Nasa did not say which of the astronauts, who are on their return journey to Earth after the fly-by, took the photographs.

The Earthset photo carried echoes of the famous Earthrise photograph taken by Bill Anders aboard Apollo 8 in 1968 in the moon fly-by that preceded the historic first human landing the following year.

The astronauts took the photos during a six-hour flyby, including a period of radio silence when their capsule was behind the Moon.

Nasa said in its description that the Earthrise photograph was captured through the Orion spacecraft window at 18:41Eastern Daylight Time (2341BST) on Monday.

"The dark portion of Earth is experiencing nighttime. On Earth's day side, swirling clouds are visible over the Australia and Oceania region," Nasa said.

"In the foreground, Ohm crater has terraced edges and a flat floor interrupted by central peaks. Central peaks form in complex craters when the lunar surface, liquefied on impact, splashes upwards during the crater's formation.'

NASA The sun shining behind the blocked out moonNASA

The solar eclipse which the astronauts witnessed, with the Moon blocking out the Sun

For the astronauts, seeing a lunar eclipse as the Moon blocked out the Sun was a highlight, even on this extraordinary trip.

Victor Glover described it as "sci-fi" and "unreal", also describing the view of the corona of the Sun.

"This continues to be unreal," he said. "The Sun has gone behind the Moon and the corona is still visible, and it's bright and creates a halo almost around the entire moon.

"The Earth is so bright out there and the Moon is just hanging in front of us."

NASA Cratered surface of the MoonNASA

Nasa called this picture of the lunar surface 'Ready for a close up'

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