Daily views of Earth from space
In almost real time, the full, sunlit side of the Earth, available every day from a new NASA’s website.
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In almost real time, the full, sunlit side of the Earth, available every day from a new NASA’s website.
An impressive phenomenon in this NASA video. A massive Black Hole shreds passing star…
The four NASA satellites of the Magnetospheric Multiscale mission just broke a record, by flying now at their smallest separation, the tightest multi-spacecraft formation ever flown in
A computer-generated composite view of Pluto, filled with about 1,500 #PlutoTime images shared on social media.
Rare Mammatus clouds, derived from the Latin mamma (meaning “udder” or “breast”), can appear especially dramatic if sunlit from the side. Photographed by Craig Lindsay over Regina,
Flying-by the Jedi Transition of the Sidewinder Low Level in a F/A-18F.
Architects want to transform Iceland’s boring electricity pylons, into giant human statues.
The first discovery of an exoplanet, called 51 Pegasi b, orbiting a sun-like star beyond our solar system, discovered 20 years ago, on October 6.
An astonishing image sequence follows late September’s total lunar eclipse above a rugged landscape and sea of clouds from the Canary island of La Palma. Image credit
This awesome film is primarily layer-lapse footage, a technique where different regions of a scene are shown at different points in time.