This is for all the moon lovers who wonder about its different phases and are awestruck with its beauty. As people stuck on a circling planet, we’re to some degree constrained by our perspective. Gazing toward the night sky, we can see our nearest neighbor, the Moon, sparkling back at us, yet have you at any point considered what we should resemble from our satellite?
Made in isolation, depicting isolation. Here's how Earth looks from the Moon & how Moon looks from Earth, April 2020: showing accurate phases and rotations. CGI based on real NASA imagery, lunar topography (exaggerated for fun), using NASA data (see it 4K https://t.co/EQ2fdR0u95) pic.twitter.com/YwO6GG5B4D
— Dr James O'Donoghue (@physicsJ) April 19, 2020
Planetary researcher James O’Donoghue has now held up a mirror for every one of us to see reality. Utilizing genuine NASA symbolism and positional information alongside lunar geology symbolism, the previous NASA worker has made a PC created, high-goals video of what Earth resembles from the Moon, while likewise giving us what the Moon resembles from Earth simultaneously.
With each edge of the video speaking to 15 minutes of genuine time, the last item envelops the whole month of April 2020 (in CGI structure, at any rate), and permits us an infinite viewpoint any semblance of which we’ve never observed. Is it not too much to take in at a glance? It is just mind blowing, right.
O’Donoghue further clarified that while the video may look genuine, it was simply founded on certain designs he’d seen, and said his objective was to show the stages, turns, points, and size changes. This truly can be explained with the level of technological advancements that we see today.
On Twitter, O’Donoghue additionally referenced he’d been drawn closer about composing a book, yet conceded he’d been investing the vast majority of his free energy basically making new livelinesss. At the point when they look this stunning, we wouldn’t fret by any stretch of the imagination. We look forward to more mind bobbling works from Dr. James O’Donoghue.