Photos of our own planet Earth taken by the Cassini spacecraft while it was orbiting Saturn, on 19 July 2013 and 12 April 2017, respectively.
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Stunning, trippy 1970s NASA concept art for future space colony designs. Available (plus many more) in super hi-res here (and copyright free), for all your desktop wallpaper and/or prog-rock album cover needs. (via io9)
A solar eclipse (left) happens when the moon gets in the way of the sun’s light and casts its shadow on Earth. During a lunar eclipse (right), Earth gets in the way of the sun’s light hitting the moon.
NASA concept art from the Apollo era.
The Dark Side of the Moon
The Sirens of Titan
A vintage NASA-commissioned Rick Guidice painting gives a cutaway view of the inside of a space colony design known as the Stanford torus, a proposed habitat that would house 10,000 to 140,000 permanent residents. The rotating, doughnut-shaped ring could have a diameter of around 2 kilometers, revolving once per minute to give about 1.0g of artificial gravity on the inside of the ring through centripetal force. A massive system of mirrors would provide the sunlight needed for daily activity, agriculture, and so forth. (NASA Ames Research Center)
Flying 250 miles above the Earth aboard the International Space Station has given me the unique vantage point from which to view our planet. Spending a year in space has given me the unique opportunity to see a wide range of spectacular storm systems in space and on Earth.
The recent blizzard was remarkably visible from space. I took several photos of the first big storm system on Earth of year 2016 as it moved across the East Coast, Chicago and Washington D.C. Since my time here on the space station began in March 2015, I’ve been able to capture an array of storms on Earth and in space, ranging from hurricanes and dust storms to solar storms and most recently a rare thunder snowstorm.
Blizzard 2016
Hurricane Patricia 2015
Hurricane Joaquin 2015
Dust Storm in the Red Sea 2015
Dust Storm of Gobi Desert 2015
Aurora Solar Storm 2015
Aurora Solar Storm 2016
Thunderstorm over Italy 2015
Lightning and Aurora 2016
Rare Thunder Snowstorm 2016
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Father and son oberve Apollo 11 Launch © Ralph Crane
Today NASA released parts of the set of highest-resolution pictures of Pluto from the New Horizons probe’s fly-by in July. As they write, “these latest images form a strip 50 miles (80 kilometers) wide on a world 3 billion miles away.” Imagine that. They are also the highest resolution images we’ll have of Pluto in a long, long time.
This picture, a crop, shows Sputnik Planum and the al-Idrisi mountains, which are made of big chunks of water ice. Be sure to check out the whole thing.