This is how the Earth looks from the South Pole of the Moon, NASA shared a scintillating video

This is how the Earth looks from the South Pole of the Moon, NASA shared a scintillating video


US space agency NASA has released a video of Earth's view from the Moon's pole. This video was produced by the Scientific Visualization Studio at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center in Maryland. It took this NASA studio three months to create this two-minute video. during this video, the planet may be seen rapidly moving from top to bottom, while the Sun is seen shining beautifully round the horizon.


A closer have a look at the video shows that the world is coming between the Sun and the Moon. thanks to this, an eclipse is seen on the Moon. However, if the Moon came between the planet and also the Sun, then this eclipse would be visible to the people of the planet. NASA studio released the video saying that it's a eclipse for Earth watchers, within which the shadow of the planet is seen falling on the Moon.



The virtual camera within the animation is at the rim of Shackleton Crater, which is partially visible at the underside right. this can be roughly the identical area that NASA is targeting for its Artemis moon-landing mission. The agency hopes to complete its mission to this part of the Moon by 2022. In this, the Robotic Exploration Team also will be sent to the surface of the Moon.


The agency announced last week that NASA's Artemis 1 mission is anticipated to launch in February 2022. It was earlier scheduled but got delayed thanks to technical glitches. This mission will first go around the moon, then it'll be landed on the surface of the moon. After experimenting on the Moon for a specific period, this vehicle will return to Earth.


NASA's next Moon mission is called Artemis-2. In this, a crew will be sent to orbit the Moon. A Canadian space scientist has also been selected for this. The launch of this mission has been scheduled for 2023. NASA hopes that Artemis 3 are a landing mission, which can be landed on the surface of the Moon with astronauts.