Mashable 05月02日 02:59
Live from space! Watch Earth live streamed on Mashable.
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国际空间站通过Sen公司的SpaceTV-1高清摄像系统,向地球直播250英里之外的地球景象,包括森林、海洋和城市等。Sen的创始人表示,此举旨在让更多人能够通过互联网观看,从而实现太空民主化。该直播每天大约有20个小时的实时画面,通过NASA的卫星系统传输,仅有几秒延迟。由于卫星切换或太阳能电池板阻挡等原因,直播会偶尔出现信号中断,但会很快恢复。空间站每天绕地球飞行16次,每次轨道都会略微西移,因此每次观看都能看到不同的景色。

📡 Sen公司的SpaceTV-1高清摄像系统架设在国际空间站,从距离地球250英里处直播地球景观,包括森林、海洋和城市等。

🛰️ 直播信号通过NASA的跟踪与数据中继卫星系统传输到地球表面,延迟仅几秒钟,但会因卫星切换或空间站的太阳能电池板遮挡等原因偶尔中断。

🌍 国际空间站每天绕地球飞行约16次,每次轨道都会略微西移,这意味着每次观看直播都有可能看到不同的地球景观,增加了观看的新鲜感和趣味性。

⏰ 当空间站运行到地球的夜晚一侧时,屏幕下方会显示“日出倒计时”,并标注当前所 viewing 的地理位置,例如“坦桑尼亚”。

Behold, Earth.

The live stream you see above is beamed down from the International Space Station, which orbits some 250 miles above our planet. It's filmed by the Earth and space live streaming company Sen, whose high-definition camera system, SpaceTV-1, peers down at sprawling forests, oceans, metropolises, and beyond.

"You see a beautiful planet and a borderless world," Sen's founder and CEO, Charles Black, told Mashable.

Anyone, with internet, can watch it. "It's about democratizing space," Black added.

The video from Sen, a Mashable media partner, averages about 20 hours of live footage every day, with just a few seconds or so of latency as the signal travels to Earth's surface — via NASA's Tracking and Data Relay Satellite System — and is then distributed to people watching, like you. Spread out over 24-hours are routine loss of signal periods, which can last fewer than two minutes or as long as some 20 minutes, wherein Sen will replay recently live streamed footage. Signal losses in orbit occur for a variety of reasons, such as when NASA switches satellite relays during downlinking or when the signal is blocked by the station's sprawling solar arrays.

"You never know what you might see."
- Charles Black

Tuning in, you'll regularly see new sights. The space station orbits Earth about 16 times a day, and during each orbit the floating laboratory shifts a little to the west. "Whenever you log on, you can see something different," Black said. "You never know what you might see." When the station is orbiting above the nightside of Earth, a message on the bottom of the screen will read "Sunrise in X minutes." The messaging also shows where the view is, such as "Tanzania."

We've certainly come a long way since U.S. researchers captured the first view of Earth from space in 1946. It's grainy, but poignant. Some 14 years later, a new era in Earth observation commenced when the U.S. weather satellite TIROS-1 beamed back over 19,000 orbital images in 1960.

Now, you can watch high-definition live footage from your phone.

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国际空间站 地球直播 太空探索 高清影像
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