View allAll Photos Tagged Spacestation
Expedition 35 Flight Engineers Chris Cassidy (pictured) and Tom Marshburn (out of frame) completed a spacewalk at 2:14 p.m. EDT May 11, 2013 to inspect and replace a pump controller box on the International Space Station’s far port truss (P6) leaking ammonia coolant. The two NASA astronauts began the 5-hour, 30-minute spacewalk at 8:44 a.m.
A leak of ammonia coolant from the area near or at the location of a Pump and Flow Control Subassembly was detected on Thursday, May 9, prompting engineers and flight controllers to begin plans to support the spacewalk. The device contains the mechanical systems that drive the cooling functions for the port truss.
Image Credit: NASA
NASA Goddard Space Flight Center enables NASA’s mission through four scientific endeavors: Earth Science, Heliophysics, Solar System Exploration, and Astrophysics. Goddard plays a leading role in NASA’s accomplishments by contributing compelling scientific knowledge to advance the Agency’s mission.
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The Chinese space station obviously is just circling about 335 kms above the Earth in an out-of-control descending orbit, and only appears above the Milky Way from my perspective.
Space Shuttle Atlantis taking off to the International Space Station with the European Columbus Module on board (STS 122/1E Launch).
Taken with my Canon F1N with a Canon 200 2.8 lens on Fuji Provia100F.
Back cover of the soundtrack album 2001: A Space Odyssey, 1968 ‧ epic sci-fi/adventure film... directed by Stanley Kubrick and starring Keir Dullea.
... seen at an antiques/junk/old stuff store in Carson City, Nevada.
The paths of the Space Station and Space Shuttle almost superimposed on each other but appearing in the sky a minute or so apart as they rose out of the west, with the Shuttle chasing the ISS. Venus and Jupiter are in close conjunction low in the southwest at left.
This was with the Canon 20Da camera and 15mm Canon full-frame fish-eye lens at f/2.8, for a set of 19 exposures of 15 seconds each. A composite from downsized JPG originals only.
After a year in orbit it was realized that the International Space Station had no real human use and it was donated to the S.P.C.A. for domestic animal missions. In this March 5th photo, Puffy the cat is seen high over the Bahamas on his 383rd day in space which is a feline record.
On each additional day he spends in orbit, Puffy will add to his record and to our understanding of the effects of long duration spaceflight on domestic pets. When we gaze up at the night sky we can thank these brave animals for their sacrifice.
Created in Google Gemini 2.5 Flash, aka, "Nano Banana."
See more here: www.youtube.com/@journeymanplayer7459
Image rendered @33 megapixels (custom DSR)
Injectable camera tools by Otis_Inf (game rolled back to v1.0.4)
Reshade 3.4.1
Real Lights plus Ultra Graphics Mod by jmx777
Cropped and resampled on GIMP
I thought I'd make it extra hard on myself this evening and throw an International Airport into my Startrails and Spacestations. This is the ISS passing over Ottawa International at about 2130hrs. There was lots of traffic both coming and going. I put myself too close to some streetlights and my Tokina 16-28mm captured their glare beautifully (sarcasm). Babysteps. I'll have this thing nailed by the end of the week at this rate. The only problem is finding dark areas around Ottawa.
It might looks less ambitious than my previous one, but it was actually even harder to shot properly. I've gave up after more than an hundred shots xD. Hope you'll enjoy this shot, which I think is (almost) decent ;-)
The International Space Station made an appearance on the first night of meteor hunting for the Geminid Meteor Shower. Another, unidentified satellite also whisks by.
Comet 46P/Wirtanen was in the frame to the left, but I cropped it out.
One thing I did wrong here was not starting my exposure before the ISS entered the frame. But in my defense, I was running a Field Event and was attending to our clients.
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After having tasted every kind of delicacy during his vacation, Benny can't stand the space rations anymore...
(Picture taken with my brand new Raynox macro/close-up conversion lens)
Image rendered @33 megapixels (custom DSR)
Injectable camera tools by Otis_Inf (game version rolled back to 1.0.4)
Real Lights plus Ultra Graphics Mod by jmx777
Reshade 3.4.1
Cropped and resampled on GIMP
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The oddest ISS pass I have taken to date, 36,000ft over the english channel. It was a tricky shot to plan for with the recent sunset and blue sky, movement of the aircraft and also changes in time of appearance due to the altitude.
Some interesting movement from the ISS and Venus as the aircraft banks and turns.
Taken with the GoPro Hero 5, suckered to the window. I had to cover the window with my jacket to remove the internal light pollution inside the cabin.
Late July 2016 and it's ISS spotting time again. A clear night on 30th July and the space station was seen very clearly flying over the UK. A very bright pass at about 23:15 - you could almost see the 'spacemen' waving at you.
What's the use of sitting in a tavern where no-one understands you, and without money to pay anyway?
Toy Project Day 3741
The Coriolis Starport from video game Elite Dangerous.
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