Some photos are composites, yes, as most satellites aren't far enough out to take a complete photo all in one go, so they take many different pictures of areas of the globe then composite them together.
The photos I'm linking are not composites they are single image photos, taken from the DSCOVR spacecraft.
So, no, nothing to do with that video you linked.
Typical flat earth response though...
Flat Earther: "Show me a picture of the Earth from space!" <gets shown a picture of the earth from space> Flat Earther: "FAKE CGI PHOTOSHOP!"
As I said before, I don't believe there's anything I could show you that you wouldn't scream fake at, so why bother?
Huh? I admitted it was a composite? No, I said it had an overlay to show you where the countries are. The image is a real photo underneath. If you don't understand that , then let me help you...
There's a button towards the bottom right of the webpage that says "Plot outlines" when you hover your mouse over it. Click it a few times to turn off the overlay and you will see the photo without and "cgi" overlaid.
In fact, just in case that's still too complicated for you, let me embed the image in the post...
Photo taken at 19:10 today...
Or how about one from 02:50 today...
One of these is photographed every 10 minutes, and this is a Japanese satellite, nothing to do with NASA.
Some photos are composites, yes, as most satellites aren't far enough out to take a complete photo all in one go, so they take many different pictures of areas of the globe then composite them together.
The photos I'm linking are not composites they are single image photos, taken from the DSCOVR spacecraft.
So, no, nothing to do with that video you linked.
Typical flat earth response though...
Flat Earther: "Show me a picture of the Earth from space!"
<gets shown a picture of the earth from space>
Flat Earther: "FAKE CGI PHOTOSHOP!"
As I said before, I don't believe there's anything I could show you that you wouldn't scream fake at, so why bother?
Huh? I admitted it was a composite? No, I said it had an overlay to show you where the countries are. The image is a real photo underneath. If you don't understand that , then let me help you...
There's a button towards the bottom right of the webpage that says "Plot outlines" when you hover your mouse over it. Click it a few times to turn off the overlay and you will see the photo without and "cgi" overlaid.
In fact, just in case that's still too complicated for you, let me embed the image in the post...
Photo taken at 19:10 today...
Or how about one from 02:50 today...
One of these is photographed every 10 minutes, and this is a Japanese satellite, nothing to do with NASA.