Skip to main content

This amazing timelapse footage from ISS shows you what Earth looks like from space

This video shows how beautiful Earth looks from the International Space Station

If you’re a stickler for space photography, take a couple of moments out of your day to sit back and enjoy a breathtaking timelapse video by French filmmaker Guillaume Juin. Comprising more than 80GB worth of photos taken by ISS-based astronauts over a three-year period, you’ll have to remind yourself halfway through that this is the real deal and not some CGI effort served up by a Hollywood movie studio.

The stunning piece of work showcases the very best of the publicly available timelapse sequences, with Juin crediting “the crew members of ISS expeditions 28, 29, 30, 31, 34, shot from 2011 to 2014” for creating the material.

Recommended Videos

The filmmaker says in a Vimeo post that he wanted to use the photos to “do something different from what has been done before with those shots. Something more dynamic and fast. After all, ISS travels through space at 28,000km/h!”

He also suggests some moments to watch out for in the video, including at 1’11 when you can catch a refueling shuttle disintegrating as it heads toward Earth. There’s also a neat segment at 1’20 when a telecom satellite launches from the ISS into orbit.

Juin adds, “The little green and purple lights you can see at 1’57 are respectively fishing boats and oil platforms offshore with the big city of Bangkok nearby.” The ISS itself pops in and out of shot along the way, while some of the most impressive imagery shows the remarkable sight of a colorful aurora occurring over Earth.

Adobe’s After Effects software was used by Juin to administer some subtle changes to the visuals, while Premiere was used for editing. The highly polished production comes in at just under three minutes and plays with a technopop tune from Vincent Tone.

[Source: Guillaume Juin / Earth Science and Remote Sensing Unit, NASA Johnson Space Center]

Trevor Mogg
Contributing Editor
Not so many moons ago, Trevor moved from one tea-loving island nation that drives on the left (Britain) to another (Japan)…
A spacecraft at the ISS is about to take a very short trip
The Soyuz MS-23 spacecraft is seen approaching the Poisk module of the space station prior to docking at 7:58 p.m. EST as the space station was flying 260 miles above northern Mongolia.

Three astronauts at the International Space Station (ISS) are about to take a very short ride aboard a Soyuz spacecraft.

In a maneuver designed to make room for the arrival of the Roscosmos Progress 84 cargo spacecraft later this year, astronaut Frank Rubio of NASA, and Roscosmos cosmonauts Sergey Prokopyev and Dmitri Petelin, will this week hop aboard the Soyuz MS-23 capsule and pilot it from the Poisk module on the space-facing side of the complex to the Prichal module on the Earth-facing side of the outpost.

Read more
A crew capsule just landed on Earth. But why was it empty?
The damaged Soyuz MS-22 departs the space station for the voyage home.

Soyuz spacecraft regularly bring crew home from the International Space Station (ISS), but the one that returned on Tuesday had three empty seats.

In what’s thought to be the first voyage of its kind, Soyuz MS-22 undocked from the space station without any crew and took two hours to reach its landing spot in Kazakhstan following an automated, parachute-assisted descent.

Read more
SpaceX shares stunning ‘blue marble’ footage of Earth
Earth as seen from a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket.

SpaceX recently shared some stunning footage captured from the second stage of its workhorse Falcon 9 rocket.

The clip (below) shows Earth from thousands of miles away, with ocean, land, and cloud all clearly visible. Most striking, however, is the planet’s marble-like appearance that brings to mind the iconic "blue marble" shot captured during the Apollo 17 mission in 1972 that gave us one of our first incredibly clear views of Earth.

Read more