A gallery for Earth Day

NASA’s #NoPlaceLikeHome celebrates planet Earth with a variety of images

April 22, 2015 05:45 pm | Updated 05:45 pm IST - WASHINGTON:

This image is a composite of southern Africa and the surrounding oceans. Tropical Cyclone Joalane is seen over the Indian Ocean. The image was created by the Ocean Biology Processing Group at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland.

This image is a composite of southern Africa and the surrounding oceans. Tropical Cyclone Joalane is seen over the Indian Ocean. The image was created by the Ocean Biology Processing Group at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland.

Celebrating the Earth Day, NASA has released some of the most gorgeous images and a stunning video of planet Earth as captured from the International Space Station (ISS).

As part of its Earth Day programme, the US space agency is asking people for videos, messages, Instagram pictures celebrating our world, with the hashtag #NoPlaceLikeHome.

In the image gallery celebrating Earth Day, you can see a composite image of southern Africa and the surrounding oceans to the tropical cyclone Joalane seen over the Indian Ocean.

What’s special about Earth?
* Earth is the most complex of the 1, 800 planets discovered in our cosmos so far. * NASA’s 20 Earth-orbiting missions are in a quest to build the most complete understanding possible of our dynamic planet. *The space agency has a Facebook page dedicated to the #NoPlaceLikeHome project and also provides full coverage on its redesigned web site.

On April 5 this year, the Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS) on NASA’s Terra satellite acquired a natural-colour image of sea ice off the coast of East Antarctica’s Princess Astrid Coast. Next day, NASA astronaut Scott Kelly took a stunning photograph over Australia and posted it on social media.

NASA’s Terra satellite also captured the March 20 solar eclipse’s shadow over clouds in the Arctic Ocean. From the ISS, Expedition 42 Flight Engineer Barry Wilmore took a photograph of the Great Lakes and central US on December 7 last year and posted it on social media. The NASA video features dramatic visual comparisons of parts of the Earth most severely impacted by climate change, including the Aral sea visibly shrinking between 2000 and 2014. It also features photographs of areas impacted by extreme weather, such as partially submerged islands in Bermuda.

“Every day of every year, NASA satellites provide useful data about our home planet, and along the way, some beautiful images as well,” NASA posted in the video. The clip was released on the “Earth Day” as NASA plans to focus attention on “exploring” our home planet.

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