The lunar eclipse this week made many of us look at the night sky to admire the red moon, and now we can see how this terrible effect looked from the other side thanks to the images shot by Blue Ghost Lander Firefly's Blue Ghost. From the point of view of the Lander on the Moon, the phenomenon of March 14 was solar Eclipse, and the last video shows the red light exhibited over the blue ghost when the earth temporarily blocked the sun. New images appeared shortly after the team shared a photograph When the sun began to recover.
“These images, quickly filmed by our upper deck camera with various exposure settings, were sewn together in a quick clamp,” Firefly said. “Red shade is the result of the fact that sunlight overcomes the atmosphere of the Earth when our planet blocked the sun, throwing a shadow on the lunar surface.” At the beginning of the video, where the images are better lit, you can see Venus as a small point above the eclipse. And if you really look Really In total, you will also see Mercury on the left.
Blue Ghost has landed on the moon on March 2, and since then Firefly shared quite amazing photos and videos, including The field is expected that the Lander’s mission will soon end with the beginning of the lunar night, but at first it will observe the lunar sunset on March 16.