Éphéméride Chaque jour a son histoire

Éphéméride astronomique du jour

Données astronomiques

Soleil
Lever
06:42
Coucher
20:55
Durée du jour 14h 13min (+3min 21s) Midi solaire 13:48 Crépuscule civil 06:09 — 21:28 Heure dorée 19:55 — 20:55
Lune
Premier quartier — 23/04/2026
Premier quartier
Illumination : 42%

Image astronomique du jour

Earthset with an iPhone

What does it mean for the Earth to set? Artemis II Commander Reid Wiseman gave us another spectacular view of Earth from their historic flyby of the Moon. Commander Wiseman's video, taken with an iPhone at 8x zoom, shows our entire planet gradually blocked from view by the Moon. On the Earth, the 24-hour planetary rotation causes the Sun to set below your horizon every night. However, on Artemis II the Earthset was caused not by the Moon’s rotation but by the spacecraft moving behind the Moon (at about 55 seconds in this video). Once rare, views of Earth are now taken many times a day from many spacecraft, including NASA’s SWOT (Surface Water and Ocean Topography) satellite tracking freshwater resources and USGS Landsat 8 and 9 satellites supporting water management for farmers, for example. Space agencies around our home planet now work together to provide unique and ever-improving views of our Earth. Celebrate: Earth Day