Remote Views

Discover stunning Earth views from space, including the new Earth Channel featuring a 24/7 view from a geosynchronous TV satellite.

Written byJohn Conway
| 2 min read
Google NewsGoogle News Preferred Source

Newsletter

Sign up for our email newsletter for the latest science news

Sign Up

Inspired by Earth Day (and eerily in sync with Julianne!) I have been looking for good views of the planet from space. In fact, two nights ago my TV satellite provider Dish Network launched the Earth Channel, with a 24/7 view of the earth from the EchoStar 11 satellite.

There is also a video with a compressed 24 hour series of stills taken from the camera. At one point you see the moon passing behind the earth. Of course since it's a TV satellite, it's geosynchronous and you'll only ever see the western hemisphere. As far as I can tell, though, you cannot get it online anywhere. And this one is pretty cool. Even though the image is not very sharp, you can actually control a little web cam on a the Tate satellite, in polar orbit 400 km above the earth... Add a focus button! I cannot seem to get NASA's ISS webcam stream to work. Darn. Too popular? Not Mac compatible? Sadly, Al Gore's 1990's vision of an Earth-viewing satellite, originally called Triana, and later renamed DSCOVR, sits in storage at Goddard, having been built but cancelled in 2006. Speaking of which, it appeared for some time that a similar fate awaited Nobel Prize winner Sam Ting's Alpha Magnetic Spectrometer, designed to search for antimatter (antihelium nuclei, in fact) and other things in space. Construction of the $1.5 billion satellite was completed, and it awaits launch at CERN. An additional, final Space Shuttle mission, STS-134, was added to the 2010 NASA schedule. It was authorized by Congress in the fall but I am not sure if funding has been appropriated yet. (My money is on Sam Ting, though.) Anyway, where are the cool views of our planet from space?

Meet the Author

Stay Curious

JoinOur List

Sign up for our weekly science updates

View our Privacy Policy

SubscribeTo The Magazine

Save up to 40% off the cover price when you subscribe to Discover magazine.

Subscribe