• About Air & Space
  • Email Updates
  • Member Services
  • Shop
  • Archive
airspacemag.com
  • Smithsonian Institution
  • Smithsonian Channel
  • goSmithsonian
  • Smithsonian magazine
  • Home
  • History of Flight
  • Flight Today
  • Military Aviation
  • Space Exploration
  • Photos & Videos
  • Subscribe
View of Earth from a camera on V-2 #13, launched October 24, 1946. View of Earth from a camera on V-2 #13, launched October 24, 1946.
(White Sands Missile Range/Applied Physics Laboratory)
  • Space Exploration

The First Photo From Space

In 1946, rocket-borne cameras gave us our first look at Earth from beyond the atmosphere.

  • By Tony Reichhardt
  • Air & Space Magazine, November 01, 2006

Photo Gallery

View of Earth from a camera on V-2 #13, launched October 24, 1946.

The First Photo From Space

Explore more photos from the story

Article Tools

 
  • Font
  • Share/Save/Bookmark Share
     
  • Email
  •  
  • Print
  • Digg Digg
     
  • Comments
  • StumbleUpon StumbleUpon
     
  • RSS
  • Reddit Reddit
     

    Most Popular

    • Viewed
    • Emailed
    1. Space Suits Past and Future
    2. Welcome to Cyberairspace
    3. B-36: Bomber at the Crossroads
    4. Live and Let Fly
    5. The Dawn of Discipline
    6. The Notorious Flight of Mathias Rust
    7. Can We Stop a Nuke?
    8. Voices from the Moon
    9. Max Q Live
    10. Comin' atcha
    1. Apollo’s Army
    2. Welcome to Cyberairspace
    3. Fire Hazard
    4. The Dawn of Discipline
    5. Lighter Than Air
    6. Where the Sun Does Shine
    7. Unmanned Traffic Jam
    8. Can We Stop a Nuke?
    9. Above and Beyond: Too Much, Too Soon
    10. Space Suits Past and Future

    On October 24, 1946, not long after the end of World War II and years before the Sputnik satellite opened the space age, a group of soldiers and scientists in the New Mexico desert saw something new and wonderful—the first pictures of Earth as seen from space.

    The grainy, black-and-white photos were taken from an altitude of 65 miles by a 35-millimeter motion picture camera riding on a V-2 missile launched from the White Sands Missile Range. Snapping a new frame every second and a half, the rocket-borne camera climbed straight up, then fell back to Earth minutes later, slamming into the ground at 500 feet per second. The camera itself was smashed, but the film, protected in a steel cassette, was unharmed.

    Fred Rulli was a 19-year-old enlisted man assigned to the recovery team that drove into the desert to retrieve film from those early V-2 shots. When the scientists found the cassette in good shape, he recalls, "They were ecstatic, they were jumping up and down like kids." Later, back at the launch site, "when they first projected [the photos] onto the screen, the scientists just went nuts."

    Before 1946, the highest pictures ever taken of the Earth’s surface were from the Explorer II balloon, which had ascended 13.7 miles in 1935, high enough to discern the curvature of the Earth. The V-2 cameras reached more than five times that altitude, where they clearly showed the planet set against the blackness of space. When the movie frames were stitched together, the panoramas taken  in the late 1940s covered a million square miles or more at a single glance. As Clyde Holliday, the engineer who developed the camera, wrote in National Geographic in 1950, the V-2 photos showed for the first time "how our Earth would look to visitors from another planet coming in on a space ship."

    It was one of many firsts for the V-2 research program of the late 1940s, during which the Army fired dozens of captured German missiles brought to White Sands in 300 railroad cars at the end of the war. While the missileers used the V-2s to refine their own rocket designs, scientists were invited to pack instruments inside the nosecone to study temperatures, pressures, magnetic fields and other physical characteristics of the unexplored upper atmosphere.

    Holliday worked for the Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory (APL), alongside pioneering space scientists like James Van Allen and S. Fred Singer, both of whom would later be involved in planning the first U.S. satellites. Singer—better known today as a dogged skeptic of global warming with the Science and Environmental Policy Project in Arlington, Virginia—would analyze the photos that came back from the V-2 cameras to determine the rocket’s orientation to the Earth, a job he remembers as "quite difficult." The missile engineers needed to know how the rocket was steering through the upper atmosphere, and the scientists wanted to determine from which direction cosmic rays hitting their instruments were coming. Hardly anyone was interested in what the pictures revealed about geography or meteorology, at least not at first. "We considered clouds to be a nuisance," says Singer.

    But Holliday, an instrument specialist at APL, well understood the importance of the photos for the study of Earth. Cy O’Brien, who worked in the lab’s public affairs office beginning in 1950, says Holliday was "in an environment with super-Ph.D.s, and he wanted to make clear that photography was a science, too."

    Holliday’s discussion of the photos therefore leaned toward the technical. In those days before Walt Disney and Collier’s magazine planted the idea of space exploration in the public imagination, he was even sparing with his use of the term "space." The V-2 photos, he wrote in 1950, were taken in "the little-known reaches of the upper air." Today, even though the definition is somewhat arbitrary, anything above 100 kilometers (62.5 miles) is considered space.

    1 2

    On October 24, 1946, not long after the end of World War II and years before the Sputnik satellite opened the space age, a group of soldiers and scientists in the New Mexico desert saw something new and wonderful—the first pictures of Earth as seen from space.

    The grainy, black-and-white photos were taken from an altitude of 65 miles by a 35-millimeter motion picture camera riding on a V-2 missile launched from the White Sands Missile Range. Snapping a new frame every second and a half, the rocket-borne camera climbed straight up, then fell back to Earth minutes later, slamming into the ground at 500 feet per second. The camera itself was smashed, but the film, protected in a steel cassette, was unharmed.

    Fred Rulli was a 19-year-old enlisted man assigned to the recovery team that drove into the desert to retrieve film from those early V-2 shots. When the scientists found the cassette in good shape, he recalls, "They were ecstatic, they were jumping up and down like kids." Later, back at the launch site, "when they first projected [the photos] onto the screen, the scientists just went nuts."

    Before 1946, the highest pictures ever taken of the Earth’s surface were from the Explorer II balloon, which had ascended 13.7 miles in 1935, high enough to discern the curvature of the Earth. The V-2 cameras reached more than five times that altitude, where they clearly showed the planet set against the blackness of space. When the movie frames were stitched together, the panoramas taken  in the late 1940s covered a million square miles or more at a single glance. As Clyde Holliday, the engineer who developed the camera, wrote in National Geographic in 1950, the V-2 photos showed for the first time "how our Earth would look to visitors from another planet coming in on a space ship."

    It was one of many firsts for the V-2 research program of the late 1940s, during which the Army fired dozens of captured German missiles brought to White Sands in 300 railroad cars at the end of the war. While the missileers used the V-2s to refine their own rocket designs, scientists were invited to pack instruments inside the nosecone to study temperatures, pressures, magnetic fields and other physical characteristics of the unexplored upper atmosphere.

    Holliday worked for the Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory (APL), alongside pioneering space scientists like James Van Allen and S. Fred Singer, both of whom would later be involved in planning the first U.S. satellites. Singer—better known today as a dogged skeptic of global warming with the Science and Environmental Policy Project in Arlington, Virginia—would analyze the photos that came back from the V-2 cameras to determine the rocket’s orientation to the Earth, a job he remembers as "quite difficult." The missile engineers needed to know how the rocket was steering through the upper atmosphere, and the scientists wanted to determine from which direction cosmic rays hitting their instruments were coming. Hardly anyone was interested in what the pictures revealed about geography or meteorology, at least not at first. "We considered clouds to be a nuisance," says Singer.

    But Holliday, an instrument specialist at APL, well understood the importance of the photos for the study of Earth. Cy O’Brien, who worked in the lab’s public affairs office beginning in 1950, says Holliday was "in an environment with super-Ph.D.s, and he wanted to make clear that photography was a science, too."

    Holliday’s discussion of the photos therefore leaned toward the technical. In those days before Walt Disney and Collier’s magazine planted the idea of space exploration in the public imagination, he was even sparing with his use of the term "space." The V-2 photos, he wrote in 1950, were taken in "the little-known reaches of the upper air." Today, even though the definition is somewhat arbitrary, anything above 100 kilometers (62.5 miles) is considered space.

    More than 1,000 Earth pictures were returned from V-2s between 1946 and 1950, from altitudes as high as 100 miles. The photos, showing huge expanses of the American southwest, appeared in newspapers and were scrutinized by scientists from the U.S. Weather Bureau. In his National Geographic article, Holliday offered a few predictions as to where it all might lead: "Results of these tests now are pointing to a time when cameras may be mounted on guided missiles for scouting enemy territory in war, mapping inaccessible regions of the earth in peacetime, and even photographing cloud formations, storm fronts, and overcast areas over an entire continent in a few hours." Going out on a limb, he speculated that "the entire land area of the globe might be mapped in this way."

    Fred Rulli, the former member of the camera recovery team, now counts himself lucky to have been in the "select group" that saw the first pictures from space as they came in. At 19, it seemed to him like just another Army job. But he recalls a friend at White Sands, another soldier—60 years later he’s forgotten his name—who was more alive to the future unfolding in front of them. Pointing to the rockets, the scientists and the clear New Mexico sky, the friend would turn to Rulli and say with amazement, "Do you realize what’s going on here?"


     
    Comments

    An absolutely amazing photograph.

    Posted by Neil Califano on April 8,2008 | 07:59PM

    This is a very neat photo. A great symbol in space exploration.

    Posted by N/A on April 29,2008 | 09:44AM

    wow i never seen a great space picture like this!

    Posted by anonamous on May 21,2008 | 04:33PM

    That is a amazing photo of earth! WOW!

    Posted by Alyssa on May 21,2008 | 07:17PM

    Are there still some V-2 rockets around in some museum. What is the story about V-2 use in the war. Did they have orbital capability?

    Posted by Andrew Weiszmann on May 26,2008 | 09:09PM

    I had no idea that the V-2 rocket, a symbol of Nazi Germany's destructive capability, was used for such a purely scientific purpose. It is still amazing to me that rockets were in use for science (or war) in the _1940's_. What a great photograph.

    Posted by John E. on May 30,2008 | 11:40AM

    this is so amazing!that was such a fantastic time in history to be involved at the very beginning of something, i love these fotos! what a great time to be alive!

    Posted by dolores on June 13,2008 | 07:56PM

    How about putting one entire film from a V-2 on the web? It would be interesting to see the sequence from ground to space. --Ted.

    Posted by Ted on June 15,2008 | 12:45AM

    there seems to be an outline of a crater just to the right and slightly above center

    Posted by richard on June 16,2008 | 05:26PM

    this website is really cool

    Posted by michael on June 22,2008 | 03:19PM

    its a nice picture.

    Posted by manir.comilla.bangladesh on June 22,2008 | 09:54PM

    Great Picture! For those that don't know the V-2 was used my the Germans for war. The U.S.A. used many of them after the war for the real beginning of our space program.

    Posted by Michael Tonne on June 23,2008 | 02:45PM

    canyou send me that picture in my email. this picture is so nice.

    Posted by sahil kapoor on June 26,2008 | 08:36AM

    How about putting some of the 22,950 pictures taken from Tiros I, the first weather station is space on the site? It was built in 1959 and launched in 1960, took 22,950 (22,952 to be exact i believe) prior to losing power. RCA's blueprints were even scrapped to make it come to fruition!

    Posted by Stephanie Hartnett on June 28,2008 | 06:54PM

    Congratulations for interesting themes like this, that can be explored other times.

    Posted by Carlos A Lessa on July 2,2008 | 08:37AM

    What a nice picture this is

    Posted by Shaikh Irfan S. on August 31,2008 | 08:41AM

    this so fabulus,mindblowing,not discribed

    Posted by raj pandya on September 16,2008 | 06:29AM

    i am from INDIA .as i want to be a astronaut this photo is as a dream to me.

    Posted by shivani bodas on October 7,2008 | 04:46AM

    I'm from San Antiono and I always dream of being a pilot.

    Posted by vintrice on October 12,2008 | 11:38AM

    White Sands V2 Firing Table http://www.wsmr.army.mil/wsmr.asp?pg=y&page=254 V-2 # 13 Date 24 Oct 46 Time 1218 (Local) Altitude 65 (Miles) Agency APL Experiments Cosmic & solar radiation, winds, photography John

    Posted by John Scheldroup on November 13,2008 | 07:06PM

    Andrew Weiszmann asked "Are there still some V-2 rockets around in some museum?" The answer is yes. One of the most complete V-2s is at the White Sands Missile Range Museum. You can see it and read about its history at URL http://www.wsmr-history.org/V-2Display1.htm and the other 13 pages linked to it. There are others at various Museums around the world. Information on these can be found at URL http://www.v2rocket.com/.

    Posted by Doyle Piland on December 12,2008 | 01:18PM

    I have seen these photos on the old TV show The Twentieth Century hosted by Walter Cronkite. The show feature film from WW2 with V2's raining down on London to V2's being launched from White Sands NM. It filmed the ascent of the rocket and the pictures published on this site.

    Posted by John S on January 2,2009 | 10:11PM

    Isn't that picture just BEAUTIFUL?

    Posted by Aquanita E. on January 9,2009 | 01:48PM

    I remember seeing the footage of the from takeoff to maximum height at a news reel cinema just after the WW2. It had the most profound effect on me and my attitude to life on earth. We knew the earth was a sphere but seeing was believing. The image of the blue green evolving planet Earth across the barren pockmarked surface of the Moon just forty years ago was a wondrous sight that complemented my view of our Earth home in the void of space. It is a very special place and we must look after it.

    Posted by Doug Lithgow on January 12,2009 | 04:29AM

    This is cool. I didn't know that a weapon would be the first thing to take a picture from space

    Posted by Andrew on February 14,2009 | 08:17PM

    sweet pic. man.

    Posted by zach on February 18,2009 | 08:53AM

    I grew up in FL and walked outside to watch the Apollo missions lift off; and while living in the Bahamas I was able to meet all the astronauts from Apollo 9 as they came to Eleuthera after splashing down. I, of course, answered the "first photo from space" incorrectly as I immediately thought of astronauts taking the photo, not just a "machine".

    Posted by Michelle D. Terry on February 21,2009 | 07:18PM

    I was exactly 2 yrs. old when the picture of the gulf California was taken from outer space. Wonderful to live in a era of such dramatic change. When I was small I thought we were the only universe. There really is no end. Babs

    Posted by Barbara on March 1,2009 | 05:58AM

    this is a great picture.. i could really use this for a project. but thati s really bad.. but i will hyperlink this to my project.

    Posted by amanda on March 24,2009 | 06:36PM

    This picture is poor. But what it represents is absolutely magnificent!

    Posted by Swalt on May 12,2009 | 07:29AM

    Post a Comment


    Name: (required)

    Email: (required)

    Comment:



    Advertisement

    Air & Space Videos

    Wright B Over Manhattan, 1912

    In the winter of 1912, Frank Coffyn filmed the first silent motion pictures of New York ever taken from an airplane.

    A Space Suit Ahead of Its Time

    More flexible than the Apollo suit, the EX-1A never flew.

    Marines Test the Joint Strike Fighter

    A Marine takes the new F-35 for a spin.

    On the Prowl

    On the Prowl

    Climb into the cockpit for a flight in an EA-6B Prowler.

    The Human Price

    Apollo veteran Lynn Radcliffe recalls the constant stress and long hours.

    Mercury Astronauts Meet the Press, 1959

    ...and answer the question: "What was your least favorite test?"

    Advertisement

    Marketplace

    SmithsonianStore

    Night at the Museum Adult Collage Tee
    Item no: 28206

    Window Shopping

    Gifts, Gadgets and Great Finds!

    Travel & Adventure

    A Family Weekend in Washington, D.C.: Featuring "Night at the Museum: Battle of the Smithsonian"

    Spend a fun-filled weekend with your family discovering the magic of the new feature film, "Night at the Museum: Battle of the Smithsonian" (Jul. 24 - 26, 2009)

    In the Magazine

    July 2009

    • Step Outside
    • Where the Wild Things Are
    • The Six
    • Travels with Churchill
    • Tumbling with the Stars
    • The Billy Mitchell Court-Martial
    • Fire Hazard

    View Table of Contents

    Snapshot

    Red, White, and Blue

    Times two, for the 4th.

    Reader Scrapbook

    Send In Your Photos

    Check out our scrapbook of readers' aviation and space pictures. Then add your own.

    Need to Know

    What determines an airplane’s lifespan?

    Some keep flying for decades, while others end up on the scrap heap.

    Smithsonian Journeys

    Moorish Treasures of the Mediterranean

    Follow the ancient trade route and discover the civilizations that flourished in its wake



    View full archiveRecent Issues


    • Jul 2009


    • May 2009


    • Mar 2009

    Newsletter

    Sign up for regular email updates from Air & Space magazine, including free newsletters, special offers and current news updates.

    Subscribe Now

    About Us

    Air & Space/Smithsonian magazine has been delighting aerospace enthusiasts with the best writing about their favorite subject since April 1986. As an adjunct of the Smithsonian Institution's National Air and Space Museum, Air & Space matches the grand scope of the Museum, encompassing every era of aviation and space exploration. With stories that range from the Wright Brothers to the design of NASA's next lunar lander, Air & Space emphasizes the human stories as well as the technology of aviation and spaceflight.

    Explore our Brands

    • goSmithsonian.com
    • Smithsonian Air & Space Museum
    • Smithsonian Institution
    • Smithsonian Catalogue
    • Smithsonian Journeys
    • Smithsonian Channel
    • Site Map
    • Privacy Policy
    • Copyright
    • About Air & Space
    • Contact Us
    • Advertising
    • Reader Panel
    • Subscribe
    • RSS

    Smithsonian Institution

    Produced by Clickability