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NASA confirms: You Can’t See the Great Wall of China from Space

Jan 19, 2018 | 11:00 AM

Featured in Ripley's Believe It or Not!

Or Not

In today’s world many misconceptions have been perpetuated—becoming modern day “facts”—when, in reality, myths and hearsay have taken over. Sorry to burst your bubble, but in this weekly column, Ripley’s puts those delusions to the test, turning your world upside down, because you can’t always…Believe It!

Today: The Great Wall of China is not visible from space. 

Space Myth

Since 1904, people have been claiming that the Great Wall of China is so big and so prominent, that it can be seen from the surface of the moon. After 65 years of waiting, Apollo astronauts were able to confirm the authenticity of this claim. Their answer: no.

robert ripley great wall of china

Robert Ripley at the Great Wall in 1933.

Alan Bean, of the Apollo 12 mission, recounts that all you can really make out on the Earth are lots of white clouds and snow, some blue patches, a little bit of yellow, and—every once in a while—a patch of green.

“No man-made object is visible at this scale.”—Alan Bean, Apollo 12 astronaut.

A Closer Look

The Chinese space program was shaken to learn that their own astronaut, Yang Liwei couldn’t see the wall from space. This at least confirmed the invisibility wasn’t a political conspiracy.

After numerous missions to space, by astronauts from countries all over the world, nobody could see the wall. The International Space Station, which is 238,601 miles closer to the Earth than the Moon, or only 0.1% as far away, still offers no view of the Wall with the naked eye.

china from ISS

The Great Wall of China from space. Can you see it? From: NASA

Finally Photographed

It was Chinese-American astronaut Leroy Chiao who would eventually spot the wall using a camera and 180 mm lens. Even then, he could only identify a small portion of it. The human eye is often compared to having a roughly 50 mm field of view, meaning that the 180 mm lens far surpassed human capability.

great wall of china from space

Yeah, that’s obviously it, right? From: NASA

Chiao took another photograph using a 400 mm lens, and experts were even less sure that he had taken a photo of the actual wall. Favorable snowfall and sunlight had seemed to be largely responsible for photographing the wall the first time.

NASA also confirms the Great Wall is nearly impossible to photograph using conventional means, but says low-orbit satellites can capture it using radar.

great wall of china space radar

The long orange line is the wall. From: NASA

Source: NASA confirms: You Can’t See the Great Wall of China from Space