If you're into this, check out the Apollo 11 gallery[1]. Contains very high-quality images from the actual trip, including "not so common" pictures from the moon.
"very high-quality" sorry am i missing something? i can only see a max res of 1920 in any dimension
baalimago 1 days ago [-]
Ah, my bad. I thought that was the source, but seems like the DB I found the high quality versions was elsewhere. Search for the "PIA number" of the images to find the high-res versions, example:
I was also confused about this when trying to download some artemis photos to use as wallpapers. The galleries default to the "large" size, but if you copy the PIA number of an image and search at https://images.nasa.gov/ you can get the much higher resolution "original" quality.
Insanity 1 days ago [-]
Missing context :P
These are images from 60-ish years ago, so about HD quality is definitely high quality for the time.
TremendousJudge 1 days ago [-]
the film they were using for these pictures allows for way higher resolution scans than 1080p
tregoning 23 hours ago [-]
Little known fact... this images are actually backed by Flickr.com and in there you get to download the original size vs "large" which seems to only be available on the nasa.gov site
one has wrong info for mission duration. "25.5 day mission" ?
it was the 3 main chutes deployed photo.
At 12:40 p.m. EST, Dec. 11, 2022, NASA’s Orion spacecraft for the Artemis I mission splashed down in the Pacific Ocean after a 25.5 day mission to the Moon. Orion will be recovered by NASA’s Landing and Recovery team, U.S. Navy and Department of Defense partners aboard the USS Portland.
PhunkyPhil 1 days ago [-]
I'm still trying to understand how I feel about this so this is a bit of a napkin ramble;
I can't help but feel like they've missed the mark a bit on some of the imagery from the mission that's been published so far.
One of the most compelling shots from the mission, to me, was Reid Wiseman's IPhone footage from within the capsule while Earth was being eclipsed[0].
At the start there's a moment you can see the window frame and the Moon all together. Seeing the moon in context of their vantage point within the the context of the capsule gave me the awe I had as a kid again, more than almost any shot that's come out this mission. I actually felt like I was in the capsule looking at a massive, sterile cold sphere.
I understand wanting to take a nice and centered DLSR picture of... _The Moon_ when you're floating by it, but frankly I've seen thousands of those. They're doing a flyby in a capsule in space, I want to have a taste of how the moon exists from _that_ context. What is it like being ~4,000 from the Moon's surface? Take a crappy 0.5x video from your phone showing the inside, then stick it front of the window. Let the Moon be contextualized from your vantage point. I wont be able to make out every crater and basin and the colors might be off from your eye's view, but I will be able to understand what they are seeing. Everyone has an intuitive understanding and feeling of an IPhone's optics and image pipeline, in some ways seeing the Moon through that is more real and relatable than any mirrorless DLSR + color correction.
This being said I don't want to take away from the accomplishment, I'm terribly excited about space exploration and it getting more light in the zeitgeist.
Agreed with the sentiment regarding that footage. This felt closer to something you could actually experience rather than another beautiful DSLR shot. Briefly seeing the inside of the capsule, the autofocus taking a long time, the iPhone image processing vibe... Felt 100x more real.
matheusmoreira 1 days ago [-]
Thank you for posting this! That video is awesome.
modzu 1 days ago [-]
this is one of the great insights of photography and we can all apply it. no one gives a shit about another picture of the leaning tower of pisa in your photo album. its the weird, candid, accidental shots that are most interesting and enduring. but its easy to not grasp that in the moment - the tower is what you're there to see, and its stunning, so of course it's what you photograph. those spaces in between though, like that iphone video, are what secretly transcend
Daneel_ 1 days ago [-]
They all seem to be a disappointingly low resolution, unfortunately.
indiandennis 1 days ago [-]
I was also confused about this when trying to download some artemis photos to use as wallpapers. The galleries default to the "large" size, but if you copy the PIA number of an image and search at https://images.nasa.gov/ you can get the much higher resolution "original" quality.
1 days ago [-]
johnea 23 hours ago [-]
In an effort to recover the $10B they pissed away on this pointless exercise to allow people to take iPhone photos out of a spaceship window, they should charge $10M apiece for the posters...
ButlerianJihad 1 days ago [-]
On the day of the splashdown, I visited the official NASA Space Shop, and I was met with an announcement that the availability of Artemis gear is severely limited "due to unprecedented demand" and there is still a "delayed shipping" notice up there.
https://www.nasa.gov/gallery/artemis-ii-launch/
https://www.nasa.gov/gallery/journey-to-the-moon/
https://www.nasa.gov/gallery/artemis-ii-flight-day-highlight...
https://www.nasa.gov/gallery/lunar-flyby/
https://www.nasa.gov/gallery/return-to-earth/
https://www.nasa.gov/gallery/artemis-ii-splashdown-and-recov...
[1]: https://www.nasa.gov/gallery/apollo-11/
https://www.nasa.gov/image-detail/amf-as11-40-5915/
https://www.google.com/search?q=as11-40-5915
https://www.lpi.usra.edu/resources/apollo/frame/?AS11-40-591...
Just search in flickr for the image id and you will get the relevant image in Flickr. e.g. https://flickr.com/photos/nasa2explore/55208327975
it was the 3 main chutes deployed photo.
At 12:40 p.m. EST, Dec. 11, 2022, NASA’s Orion spacecraft for the Artemis I mission splashed down in the Pacific Ocean after a 25.5 day mission to the Moon. Orion will be recovered by NASA’s Landing and Recovery team, U.S. Navy and Department of Defense partners aboard the USS Portland.
I can't help but feel like they've missed the mark a bit on some of the imagery from the mission that's been published so far.
One of the most compelling shots from the mission, to me, was Reid Wiseman's IPhone footage from within the capsule while Earth was being eclipsed[0].
At the start there's a moment you can see the window frame and the Moon all together. Seeing the moon in context of their vantage point within the the context of the capsule gave me the awe I had as a kid again, more than almost any shot that's come out this mission. I actually felt like I was in the capsule looking at a massive, sterile cold sphere.
I understand wanting to take a nice and centered DLSR picture of... _The Moon_ when you're floating by it, but frankly I've seen thousands of those. They're doing a flyby in a capsule in space, I want to have a taste of how the moon exists from _that_ context. What is it like being ~4,000 from the Moon's surface? Take a crappy 0.5x video from your phone showing the inside, then stick it front of the window. Let the Moon be contextualized from your vantage point. I wont be able to make out every crater and basin and the colors might be off from your eye's view, but I will be able to understand what they are seeing. Everyone has an intuitive understanding and feeling of an IPhone's optics and image pipeline, in some ways seeing the Moon through that is more real and relatable than any mirrorless DLSR + color correction.
This being said I don't want to take away from the accomplishment, I'm terribly excited about space exploration and it getting more light in the zeitgeist.
[0]: https://www.reddit.com/r/ArtemisProgram/comments/1sq9azh/iph...