Subsequent similar images of Earth (including composites at much higher resolution) have also been termed
Blue Marble images, and the phrase "blue marble" (as well as the picture itself) is frequently used, as in the Earth flag by environmental activist organizations or companies attempting to promote an environmentally conscious image. There has also been a children's
television program called
Big Blue Marble. Poet-diplomat
Abhay Kumar penned an
Earth anthem inspired by the Blue Marble which contains "all the peoples and the nations of the world, one for all, all for one, united we unfurl the blue marble flag".
Imaging series 2001–2004 In 2002, NASA released an extensive set of satellite-captured imagery, including prepared images suitable for direct human viewing, as well as complete sets suitable for use in preparing further works. At the time, 1 km/pixel was the most detailed imagery available for free, and permitted for reuse without a need for extensive preparatory work to eliminate cloud cover and conceal missing data, or to parse specialized data formats. The data also included a similarly manually assembled cloud-cover and night-lights image sets, at lower resolutions. A subsequent release was made in 2005, named
Blue Marble Next Generation. This series of
digital image mosaics was produced with the aid of automated image-sifting upon images from
NASA's Earth Observatory, which enabled the inclusion of a complete, cloud-free globe for each month from January to December 2004, at even higher resolution (500 m/pixel). The original release of a single-image set covering the entire globe could not reflect the extent of seasonal snow-and-vegetative cover across both hemispheres, but this newer release closely modeled the changes of the seasons. A number of interactive viewers for these data have also been released, among them a
music visualization for the
PlayStation 3 that is based on the texture data.
Blue Marble 2012 On January 25, 2012,
NASA released a composite image of the
Western Hemisphere of Earth titled
Blue Marble 2012.
Robert Simmon is most notable for his visualization of the Western Hemisphere. The picture logged over 3.1 million views on the
Flickr image hosting website within the first week of release. On February 2, 2012, NASA released a companion to this new
Blue Marble, showing a composite image of the
Eastern Hemisphere from data obtained on January 23, 2012. The data was obtained from six orbits of the Earth by the Suomi NPP over an eight-hour period. during an annual meeting of Earth scientists held by the American Geophysical Union in San Francisco. The images display all the human and natural matter that glows and can be detected from space. The data was acquired by the
Suomi NPP satellite in April and October 2012 and then mapped over existing
Blue Marble imagery of Earth to provide a realistic view of the planet. The Suomi NPP satellite completed 312 orbits and gathered 2.5
terabytes of data to get a clear shot of every parcel of the Earth's land surface. Named for satellite meteorology pioneer
Verner Suomi, the satellite flies over any given point on Earth's surface twice each day and flies above the surface in a polar orbit. The nighttime views were obtained with the new satellite's "day-night band" of the Visible Infrared Imaging Radiometer Suite (VIIRS), which detects light in a range of wavelengths from green to near-infrared, and uses filtering techniques to observe dim signals such as city lights, gas flares, auroras, wildfires, and reflected moonlight. Auroras, fires, and other stray light have been removed in the case of the
Black Marble images to emphasize the city lights. The photograph, of the
Western Hemisphere, is centered over Central America. The Western United States,
Mexico and the
Caribbean are visible, but much of South America is hidden beneath cloud cover.
Greenland can be seen at the upper edge of the image. The EPIC science team plans to upload 13 new color images per day on their website. The color balance has been adjusted to approximate an image that could be seen with the average human eye. In addition to images, scientific information will be uploaded as it becomes available after in-flight calibration is complete. The science information will be ozone and aerosol amounts, cloud reflectivity, cloud height, and vegetation information. The EPIC instrument views the Earth from sunrise in the west to sunset in the east 12 to 13 times per day as the Earth rotates at 15 degrees of longitude per hour. Clearly visible are storms forming over the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans, major slowly moving "cloud rivers", dust aerosol plumes from Africa, the Sun's reflection in the oceans, ship exhaust tracks in the clouds, rivers and lakes, and the variegated land surface patterns especially in the African deserts. The spatial resolution of the color images is about 10 km (6 miles), and the resolution of the science products will be about 20 km (10 miles). Once every three months, lunar images are obtained that are the same as those viewed from Earth during a full Moon. On occasion, the other side of the Moon will appear in the Earth images as the Moon crosses in front of the Earth.
Hello, World '', taken in 2026 by
Reid Wiseman, commander of the
Artemis II near-Moon mission. In April 2026,
Artemis II Commander
Reid Wiseman took
a photo of the Earth from the
Orion Integrity spacecraft's window, the first image of the full Earth disk taken by a person since
The Blue Marble, while traveling toward the Moon for a lunar flyby. NASA's caption for the image notes that two auroras are visible and that zodiacal light can be seen as the Earth eclipses the Sun. This photo was titled
Hello, World. Like the original, unrotated version of
The Blue Marble, this photo was taken with the South Pole facing upwards. The image metadata indicates that it was taken using a Nikon D5 camera with a 14–24 mm f/2.8 lens at an aperture of f/4, an exposure time of 1/4 second, and an ISO setting of 51,200; the exposure was set manually and the image was later processed using Adobe Photoshop Lightroom Classic. == Cultural reception ==