Firefly’s Blue Ghost Lander clicked an amazing photo of a solar eclipse from the moon
Firefly’s Blue Ghost Lunar Lander has clicked a magnificent photo of a solar eclipse from the moon in which the Earth covers the greater part of the sun, leaving only leaving S It also looks almost identical to the logo of S
The ground snapped the photo around 1:30 pm on Friday morning, as the Earth slowly blocks the view of the sun. The solar eclipse of the moon happened at the same time as the common lunar eclipse here on Earth. The ground viewers saw that the moon’s surface was turning into a red tint.
Boys, the moon is red, they go out pic.twitter.com/b7sftqh1oy
– Kevin (@k3v1n) March 14, 2025
Eclipse lasted for about five hours at the Lunar landing site at Mare Crisium. Firefly released another image from the earlier part of the eclipse, which shows the Lander’s solar panel when the sun begins to hide behind the earth’s shade. Cool things, right?
Firefly’s blue ghost On the moon on Sunday, March 2, about 3:30 pm. Landed in an upright position, without problems. This is something that cannot be said S
This is Firefly’s first mission to the moon, so Blue Ghost is full of ten NASA tools designed to explore the lunar surface and collect data to (hopefully), support the upcoming human missions to the natural satellite. All of this is part of the NASA Commercial Lunar Cargo Commercial Lunar Cargo Service (CLPS). Lander is ready to work on the moon’s surface until March 16.
Firefly says she will try to connect more images from Eclipse after Blue Ghost’s X-Band antenna warms up after being stuck in the cold throughout the event. The company has already shown some exquisite POV footage from landing.
This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/science/space/fireflys-blue-lander-snaped-an-ncredible-a-solar-clipse-from-mon