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New Photo Shows the Moon May Be Farther Away Than You Think

A new photo from NASA's OSIRIS-REx spacecraft dramatically depicts the distance between the Earth and moon.
This black-and-white image of the Earth and moon was captured on Sept. 25, 2017 by NavCam 1 on NASA's OSIRIS-REx spacecraft.
This black-and-white image of the Earth and moon was captured on Sept. 25, 2017 by NavCam 1 on NASA's OSIRIS-REx spacecraft.NASA

When it's looming over the horizon, the moon can seem enormous and close. But looks can be deceptive. In a 2011 video posted by Veritasium, an interviewer found that people's guesses were wildly off when they tried to estimate the relative distance of the moon from the Earth.

If the Earth were the size of a basketball, the moon would be a tennis ball some 24 feet away. Because of space considerations, illustrations almost always put them much closer together than they actually are.

A new photo from NASA may help to dispel these misconceptions. Captured by NASA’s OSIRIS-REx spacecraft when the Earth and moon were 249,000 miles apart, the image dramatically illustrates the distance. The Earth is a tiny mottled ball at upper left and the moon is little more than a grey speck in the lower right corner.

The spacecraft was 804,000 miles from Earth when the image was captured.

Click on the image below to see it at a larger scale.

NASA

OSIRIS-REx launched in 2016 will travel to a near-Earth asteroid called Bennu and bring a small sample back to Earth in 2023.

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