[OT] The Final Frontier: The Epic Thread of Space.
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[OT] The Final Frontier: The Epic Thread of Space. | |
Shira Callie 21.03.2011 | A serene sunset over Saudia Arabia on Jan. 16, 2011 as photographed by astronaut Paolo Nespoli on the International Space Station. The space station sees 16 sunsets and sunrises every day as it orbits Earth once every 90 minutes. |
Shira Callie 21.03.2011 | |
Shira Callie 21.03.2011 | |
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Shira Callie 21.03.2011 | |
Shira Callie 21.03.2011 | |
Shira Callie 21.03.2011 | Credit: NASA/JPL/USGSWednesday, January 5, 2011 Researchers created this hemispheric view of Venus using more than a decade's worth of radar investigations culminating in the 1990-1994 Magellan mission. The planet's North Pole centers the image, color-coded to represent elevation. |
Shira Callie 21.03.2011 | |
Shira Callie 21.03.2011 | Credit: ESA/Hubble & NASA Friday, January 7, 2011 This Hubble Space Telescope image shows a section of the Eagle Nebula, specifically NGC 6611, an open star cluster that formed about 5.5 million years ago, and lies approximately 6500 light-years from Earth. It is a young cluster containing many hot, blue stars which cause the surrounding Eagle Nebula to glow brightly. The cluster and nebula together are also known as Messier 16. |
Shira Callie 21.03.2011 | |
Shira Callie 21.03.2011 | |
Shira Callie 21.03.2011 | Tuesday, January 18, 2011: The Whirlpool Galaxy, AKA spiral galaxy M51, sports a new look when seen in near-infrared light by the Hubble Space Telescope. With most of the starlight removed, this image provides the sharpest view of the dust structure of the galaxy to date. |
Shira Callie 21.03.2011 | |
Shira Callie 21.03.2011 | Friday, January 21, 2011: From the Chilean plateau of Chajnantor, where ESO's highly-advanced Atacama Pathfinder Experiment (APEX) telescope stands, comes an unique image created with very simple components. This "solargraph" shows trails of the sun in the sky taken over a six-month period from mid-December 2009 until the southern winter solstice in June 2010. The pinhole camera that made the image used a plastic film canister and a piece of photographic paper. After exposure, the paper was scanned into a computer, where the colors were reversed. The trails reveal very few clouds in the sky over Chajnantor. |
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Hailey Westen 21.03.2011 | |
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Hailey Westen 21.03.2011 | |
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Hailey Westen 21.03.2011 |
Originally Posted by b3nz0n8
thanks man |
Hailey Westen 21.03.2011 | the question is... DO YOU BELIEVE ? |
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