How inappropriate
to call this planet earth
when it is quite clearly
Ocean.
Posted 5 days ago
via nedhepburn
659 Notes
How inappropriate
to call this planet earth
when it is quite clearly
Ocean.
Posted 1 week ago
via itsfullofstars
2107 Notes
Some Strange Things Are Happening To Astronauts Returning To Earth
Posted 1 week ago
via ckck
653 Notes
ckck:
Earth as a sliver, photographed by the crew of Apollo 12 during their return from the Moon in November, 1969.
Edited by yours truly since the original scan has a nasty colour cast on it.
Posted 2 weeks ago
via the-star-stuff
1351 Notes
Posted 3 weeks ago
via nbcnews
71 Notes
Posted 1 month ago
via ikenbot
2887 Notes
Posted 1 month ago
via fuckyeahsuperman
124 Notes
Posted 1 month ago
via colchrishadfield
463 Notes
Posted 1 month ago
via vimeo
81 Notes
Time-Lapse | Earth by Bruce W. Berry Jr
Planet Earth looks positively divine from The International Space Station’s orbit.
Posted 1 month ago
via jtotheizzoe
815 Notes
Covering the Space Program
NASA doesn’t need much help selling the idea that space is super-awesome, but these covers for manuals and press conference notes from the golden age of spaceflight sure don’t hurt. They are going up for auction later this month. I wouldn’t mind having one or two of those hanging in my house, eh?
Check out many more awesome works of vintage NASA PR art here.
Posted 2 months ago
via itsfullofstars
177 Notes
The Rover Curiosity
UC Davis geology professor Dawn Sumner uses virtual reality 3-D images to walk around the surface of Earth and Mars. This new technology enables the study rocks, particularly the much older ones on the Mars, which can offer clues to the origins of the red planet and our own planet.
Posted 2 months ago
via colchrishadfield
10553 Notes
Posted 2 months ago
via ikenbot
734 Notes
10 Years of Gorgeous Images of Earth From Space
Ten years ago on March 1, the European Space Agency launched an 8-ton satellite called Envisat that would deliver back to Earth some of the most beautiful images of our planet taken from space.
Since then, Envisat has orbited Earth more than 50,000 times and has lived twice as long as planned.
The satellite has more than seven instruments on board that can use radar to see through clouds, capture ocean color and land cover, monitor the ozone layer and atmospheric pollutants, measure thermal-infrared radiation, and register surface topography.
To celebrate the satellite’s 10th anniversary, Wired has selected a few of its most beautiful images for this gallery.
Good luck deciding which one to use as wallpaper for your computer desktop.