1 00:00:00,010 --> 00:00:08,270 [ music ] 2 00:00:08,290 --> 00:00:16,060 Forty-five years ago, Apollo 8 astronauts Frank Borman, Jim Lovell, and Bill Anders became the first humans to orbit the Moon, 3 00:00:16,080 --> 00:00:20,750 and the first to witness the magnificent sight called "Earthrise." 4 00:00:20,770 --> 00:00:26,630 Now, for the first time, we can see this historic event exactly as the astronauts saw it, 5 00:00:26,650 --> 00:00:32,130 thanks to new data from NASA's Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter, or LRO. 6 00:00:32,150 --> 00:00:37,780 LRO's superb global lunar maps, combined with the astronauts' own photographs, 7 00:00:37,800 --> 00:00:43,270 reveal where Apollo 8 was over the Moon, and even its precise orientation in space, 8 00:00:43,290 --> 00:00:52,380 when the astronauts first saw the Earth rising above the Moon's barren horizon. 9 00:00:52,400 --> 00:00:57,980 On December 24, 1968, a few minutes after 10:30 am Houston time, 10 00:00:58,000 --> 00:01:02,780 Apollo 8 was coming around from the far side of the Moon for the fourth time. 11 00:01:02,800 --> 00:01:10,720 Mission Commander Frank Borman was in the left-hand seat, preparing to turn the spacecraft to a new orientation according to the flight plan. 12 00:01:10,740 --> 00:01:18,730 Navigator Jim Lovell was in the spacecraft's lower equipment bay, about to make sightings on lunar landmarks with the onboard sextant, 13 00:01:18,750 --> 00:01:23,480 and Bill Anders was in the right-hand seat, observing the Moon through his side window, 14 00:01:23,500 --> 00:01:30,080 and taking pictures with a Hasselblad still camera, fitted with a 250-mm telephoto lens. 15 00:01:30,100 --> 00:01:38,830 Meanwhile, a second Hasselblad with an 80-mm lens was mounted in Borman's front-facing window, the so-called rendezvous window, 16 00:01:38,850 --> 00:01:43,980 photographing the Moon on an automatic timer: a new picture every twenty seconds. 17 00:01:44,000 --> 00:01:53,080 These photographs, matched with LRO's high resolution terrain maps, show that Borman was still turning Apollo 8 when the Earth appeared. 18 00:01:53,100 --> 00:01:57,280 It was only because of the timing of this rotation that the Earthrise, 19 00:01:57,300 --> 00:02:06,200 which had happened on Apollo 8's three previous orbits, but was unseen by the astronauts, now came into view in Bill Anders's side window. 20 00:02:06,220 --> 00:02:12,880 Here's what it looked like, as recreated from LRO data by Goddard's Scientific Visualization Studio. 21 00:02:12,900 --> 00:02:17,850 You'll hear the astronauts' voices as captured by Apollo 8's onboard tape recorder, 22 00:02:17,870 --> 00:02:21,560 beginning with Frank Borman announcing the start of the roll maneuver, 23 00:02:21,580 --> 00:02:28,250 and you'll see the rising Earth move from one window to another as Apollo 8 turns. 24 00:05:22,200 --> 00:05:27,530 For the astronauts, seeing the Earthrise was an unexpected and electrifying experience, 25 00:05:27,550 --> 00:05:33,480 and one of the three photographs taken by Bill Anders became an iconic image of the 20th century. 26 00:05:33,500 --> 00:05:38,160 But as we've just seen and heard, that photograph was actually a group effort: 27 00:05:38,180 --> 00:05:42,330 not just because Jim Lovell found the roll of color film and gave it to Anders, 28 00:05:42,350 --> 00:05:49,580 but because the astronauts wouldn't have seen the Earth if Frank Borman hadn't been turning the spacecraft just as it was coming up. 29 00:05:49,600 --> 00:05:54,800 Today, the Earthrise has become a symbol of one of history's greatest explorations, 30 00:05:54,820 --> 00:05:58,820 when humans first journeyed to another world and then, looking back, 31 00:05:58,840 --> 00:06:05,180 saw their home planet, in Lovell's words, as a grand oasis in the vastness of space.