View allAll Photos Tagged Spacestation

My largest hangar-bay I've ever made. The poor rendering kinda ruins it, though...

Sherpas prepare their meals as the stars just start to come out on a clear night at Camp 2 on the Western Cwm - Everest

 

photography.nationalgeographic.com/photography/enlarge/st...

 

brad-jackson.info

International Space Station transiting the sun yesterday afternoon. Took just over half a second to cross (.62)

Me and the horse flies loved it!

ISS angular size: 58.32″

Taken with Canon R5 and 200-800 IS lens

The Coriolis Starport from video game Elite Dangerous.

Please support on Lego ideas: ideas.lego.com/projects/02db00b1-ca71-482d-9f34-4043a888c44f

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credits: ESA/NASA

And many many thaanks to Crimso Giger for giving me the idea of taking a photo of Mr. Spock dealing with the not so logical Mr. Robot.

Hope you like it!

A Space Station is no game, boy!

 

Toy Project Day 1503

In this image, a JAXA (Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency) cargo spacecraft is in the grasp of the Canadarm2 robotic arm following its detachment from the International Space Station’s Harmony module on Thursday, March 5, 2026. The Expedition 74 crew continued its spacewalk preparations, transferred more cargo, and conducted biology research throughout the day.

 

The HTV-X1 cargo spacecraft was uninstalled from Harmony with the Canadarm2 at 2:26 p.m. EST Thursday and maneuvered to an overnight parking position. During the crew’s sleep shift, Japanese mission controllers conducted a laser ranging sensor demonstration test with HTV-X1 still held by the robotic arm.

 

The HTV-X1 spacecraft successfully departed the station more than four months after arriving to deliver more than 9,000 pounds of supplies, scientific investigations, commercial products, hardware and other cargo for NASA and its international partners.

 

Credit: NASA

 

#NASA #InternationalSpaceStation #ISS #Launch #Astronauts #SpaceStation #science

 

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www.youtube.com/watch?v=abuOGcj_B44

 

A man takes a chance of standing in the middle of traffic to take a shot with a goofy pose.

 

A man is satisfied with the results.

 

Looking for the Official Cocoon Group? Look no further: www.flickr.com/groups/cocoonrp/

 

Visit Cocoon Here: maps.secondlife.com/secondlife/Esperia/237/170/4086

 

Cocoon: Come for the Neon, stay for the Intrigue

In the subway we were talking about all the things that are on my "space bag", we were counting how many astronauts there are, and we were moving the bag as the things on this 3-dimensional picture move when you look at them from different angles, ...

 

Part of: "res noscenda" // Universum // Memory Photograph Album - Lottchen // blue blau

 

DMC-G2 - P1790622 - 2014-05-04

#finger #hand #fingerübung

My LEGO MOC, "Live from Space! Lives of Astronauts" is compatible with the new LEGO CITY 60350 Lunar Research Base! Connect the airlocks to expand the habitable volume!

 

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.

Beautifully clear sky tonight for the first ISS pass and the Dragon Supply vehicle closing chasing it!

  

The International Space Station (ISS) transiting the Moon.

 

Date & Location:

5 November 2017, West Rand, South Africa.

 

ISS transit Info:

Real-Time transit duration = 1.28 sec.

Ground speed = 17,150 mi/h or 27,600 km/h (8.231 km/s or 5.114 mi/s)

Moon Phase: 95% Waning Gibbous (Southern Hemisphere)

 

Gear:

Video footage shot at 60fps (double speed) at a high Shutter Speed on a Nikon D500 DSLR, allowing the slow down of a very fast event.

Nikon AF-S NIKKOR 200-500mm f/5.6E ED VR Lens

Manfrotto 055PRO Tripod

Wimberley 2 Tripod Head

 

Thank you Sumarie for letting me use your camera gear!

 

Video also available on Vimeo and YouTube.

 

Martin

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The original version of:

www.flickr.com/photos/34567255@N05/18040623021/in/datepos...

 

This is not the original idea of Benny’s portrait I wanted to shoot (do you remember DigiNik13 when I commented on yours?). Some days ago, I found in my mom’s attic that Brick 1 x 6 x 5 with LL2079 Rocket and Moon Pattern (www.bricklink.com/catalogItem.asp?P=3754pb01), that come straightly from my childhood. It’s original, so it’s 35 years old and has a great sentimental value, obviously. So I changed my mind and I thought that the minifig with the white space suit on the display could have been Benny’s grandpa. That’s the result… hope you glad it!

The space station passing high over New York.

The ISS passes into shadow on a pass at about 1:30 a.m. on the morning of May 30, 2017 traveling from west (right) to southeast (left). The trail dims as it enters Earth’s shadow and turns red before fading out. The Milky Way is at left. Jupiter and Spica are at far right, Arcturus is the bright star at upper right below the ISS track.

 

This is a stack of 5 x 2 minute exposures, tracked, and mean combined to smooth noise, but with the ISS path itself from a single exposure. All with the 14mm Rokinon lens at f/2.5 and Canon 6D at ISO 1250. On the Star Adventurer Mini tracker. Shot from home during testing of the Mini tracker.

iss052e035371

Credits: ESA/NASA

Skylab astronauts took this photograph as they approached the orbiting laboratory on the the third and final mission in November 1973.

 

Image credit: NASA

 

View original image/caption:

mix.msfc.nasa.gov/abstracts.php?p=1807

 

View more Skylab images

www.flickr.com/photos/nasamarshall/sets/72157632646424119/

 

_____________________________________________

These official NASA photographs are being made available for publication by news organizations and/or for personal use printing by the subject(s) of the photographs. The photographs may not be used in materials, advertisements, products, or promotions that in any way suggest approval or endorsement by NASA. All Images used must be credited. For information on usage rights please visit: www.nasa.gov/audience/formedia/features/MP_Photo_Guidelin...

 

Looks good on black.

Seen from Dos Cabezas Siding in Anza-Borrego Desert State Park.

 

Originally thought to be noctilucent clouds.

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 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.

 

Some Rights Reserved: 2018  Steven Christenson

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[N18346-608650]

'The Outer Limits: Second Chance'

This is a composite of 28 frames taken during a timelapse which captured the International Space Station orbiting earth and Comet C/2020 F3 NEOWISE rising above the horizon before dawn.

 

The background layer is a stack of all 28 frames.

 

4K timelapse video: youtu.be/7N2X9WC-zFU

with my Benny's Space Station

Ready for docking.

Eleven astronauts and cosmonauts are living together aboard the International Space Station following the arrival of the SpaceX Crew-7 mission on Sunday. While the new crewmates get adapted to life in microgravity another crew is preparing for its departure this weekend.

 

The orbital outpost’s newest crew of four, representing the U.S., Denmark, Japan, and Russia, arrived on Sunday aboard the SpaceX Dragon Endurance spacecraft. NASA astronaut Jasmin Moghbeli, ESA (European Space Agency) astronaut Andreas Mogensen, JAXA (Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency) astronaut Satoshi Furukawa, and Roscosmos cosmonaut Konstantin Borisov are familiarizing themselves with station safety procedures and getting used to life on orbit.

 

The Crew-7 crew was now Expedition 69 Flight Engineers and will live and work 260 miles above the Earth for the next six months. During Monday afternoon, the new crew members were joined by station commander Sergey Prokopyev of Roscosmos and Flight Engineer Sultan Alneyadi of (UAE) United Arab Emirates) and reviewed the location of emergency hardware throughout the orbital lab.

 

Another crew is set to return to Earth this weekend after beginning its space station mission in March. NASA astronaut Stephen Bowen, commander of the SpaceX Dragon Endeavour spacecraft, will lead NASA Pilot Woody Hoburg and Mission Specialists Alneyadi and Andrey Fedyaev of Roscosmos when they end their mission as Expedition 69 flight engineers. The quartet is scheduled to undock Endeavour no earlier than Saturday, Sept. 2, and splash down off the coast of Florida.

 

In this image, the SpaceX Dragon Endurance spacecraft, with four Crew-7 crew members aboard, approaches the space station for a docking on Sunday, Aug. 27, 2023.

 

Image credit: NASA TV

 

#NASA #NASAMarshall #Crew7 #ISS #InternationalSpaceStation #CommercialCrew

 

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iss053e304917

Credits: ESA/NASA

The first Space Police Station, made for an online game on LEGO.com that never happened. A year later I used some of these ideas in the first sketch model for the Space Police Station set.

... as reward for such a hard work!

An opportune capture of the Chinese unmanned space station Tiangong 1 passing between the two bright stars of Canopus (centre) and Sirius (upper right). Also in this photo, spanning from the Carina Nebula (far left) to the Orion Nebula (far right), are the Milky Way and the Large Magellanic Cloud galaxies, and some thin Earth-clouds (lower right) lit by the last of the setting Sun.

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