View allAll Photos Tagged elonmusk
Man kann über Elon Musk denken was man will, aber selbst in der dunkelsten Ecke ist er präsent. Und toll, dass seine TESLA's mit einem Adapter schon damals an vielen "fremden Ladestationen" auftanken konnten .. unser AUDI e-tron leider nicht 👎😖
You can think whatever you want about Elon Musk, but even in the darkest corners he is present. And it's great that his TESLA's were able to refuel at many "third-party charging stations" with an adapter... unfortunately not our AUDI e-tron 👎😖
Liftoff!! This is a #SpaceX #Falcon9 rocket heading to space, launched at 5:27pm (EDT) Friday.
By the way, this booster has been to space and back twice in the last 21 days. No big deal.
After 2 months without a launch, this was a beautiful early morning launch at 3:14 a.m. Sunday, the #SpaceX #CRS23 #Falcon9 sent a #CargoDragon capsule full of food, equipment, supplies and experiments to the Space Station. It was also the first booster to land on the new SpaceX automated droneship A Shortfall of Gravitas (ASOG).
No Kings Day Protest on the U.S. Capitol Grounds organized by the 50501 Movement. Notice that no Democracy loving people stormed the Capitol.
SpaceX launched a spare satellite for Globalstar’s messaging and data relay network at 12:27 a.m. EDT from SLC-40 on the Cape Canaveral Space Force Station
After 3 scrubs, it was a beautiful early morning SpaceX launch with Starlink-9 at 1:12 a.m. EDT. This is a composite of the previous two images
SpaceX successfully launched the latest batch of 60 Starlink satellites last night at 10:59 p.m. EST from SLC-40 on the Cape Canaveral Space Force Station. But the first stage booster (B1059) failed to land on the drone ship "Of Course I Still Love You", ending the steak of 24 successful recoveries in a row.
Composite of 2 images: one showing the stars with the other image of the launch
SpaceX Falcon Heavy launch, and booster landing, with the USSF-67 mission from LC-39A on NASA's Kennedy Space Center at 5:56 p.m.
Eight times launched; Eight times landed.
#SpaceX #Falcon9 booster B1051.8 has returned to Cape Canaveral, eager to become B1051.9, no doubt.
Camera: me /
@WeReportSpace
Taken just a short while after the impressive Falcon X Heavy launch. Wonder if one of these dots could have been Elon's Tesla which was payload on that launch.
SpaceX launched another batch of 60 Starlink satellites at 4:28 a.m. EDT with the sixth flight of booster B1060
A SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket as it lifted 4 astronauts aboard a Crew Dragon into orbit for a rendezvous with the International Space Station. It was the third flight of that particular Crew Dragon Capsule and the first flight of the reusable first stage booster. The first stage booster landed safely back at Cape Canaveral. This is an image stack which shows the main path of the vehicle as it launched as well as the trail of the first stage booster as it fired its engines twice prior to landing. The images were taken from Vero Beach which is 63 miles (101 kilometers) south of the launch site.
SpaceX's 60th launch of 2022 carried 54 more Starlink broadband internet satellites into low Earth orbit at 4:34 a.m. EST
From the pad: the fury of 9 Merlin engines, pushing the #SpaceX #CRS14 #Falcon9 into orbit.
(Pic: me / WeReportSpace)
A SpaceX Falcon 9 launching 54 Starlink Group 5-15 Satellites at 11:50 PM on July 15th, 2023. This was the last launch of the v1.5 Starlink Satellites to be added to the Starlink mega-constellation. The image was taken from Vero Beach which is 63 miles (101 kilometers) south of the launch site. This was the 16th flight of this particular first stage reusable booster which landed successfully on the barge A Shortfall of Gravitas. The barge was located to the north of the eastern Bahamas.
#SpaceX, Thursday morning: one #Falcon9 in flight and another Falcon9 in the Port getting ready to fly again.
SpaceX launched another batch of Starlink satellites at 6:01 EDT. Composite image with one showing the stars and the Milky Way, which is slightly visible, and the other showing the launch.
SpaceX sure knows how to put on a show: This was the *amazing* view of the SAOCOM-1b Falcon9 booster returning to LZ1.
My standard amazed caption applies: Wow, just wow.
(Pic: me / We Report Space)
More #SpaceX, Thursday morning: Wide view showing a recovered (& relatively new) #Falcon9 in port, while the many times "flight-proven" booster streaks to orbit in the background.
Bonus: Dragon recovery ship "Megan" is in the foreground with a Dragon test article on deck.
SpaceX launches the Axiom-1 mission with 4 civilian astronauts to the ISS. The Falcon 9 lifted off from LC-39A on the Kennedy Space Center at 11:17 AM EDT. The Ax-1 crew members are retired NASA astronaut Commander Michael Lopez-Alegria, Pilot Larry Connor, and Mission Specialists Eytan Stibbe and Mark Pathy.
This photo is for Tesla fans. 😊
For those people who don't know anything about it: Tesla is electric car with autopilot, with great acceleration and a lot of other features.
Tesla Model S 75D, facelift.
Taken 21.6.2018 😂
2018. #Finland #Summer
Hands Off! Protest in Vero Beach, Florida on April 5, 2025. A large crowd of over 2000 showed up to protest Trump and Elon Musk policies and the havoc caused by DOGE. This was one of 1200 locations where people raised their voices across the nation with more than 5 million participating. Resist!
A couple of weeks ago there were tons of photos on social media about some comet thingamajig, but for some reason no one captured the space shuttle launch?
I was social distancing at Piazza della Famiglia in Little Italy last week when I felt some distant rumble. I looked up and saw this amazing sight! I think I was the only person that witnessed it, perhaps people’s masks covered their eyes and ears so they couldn’t see or hear the space shuttle?!
Of course this is a composite since NASA ended the space shuttle program in 2011...or maybe this is a secret Elon Musk Space X project?
Bored at home, check out my fine art prints:
Photo copyright by ©Sam Antonio Photography 2020
Contact me to license my images:
sam@samantoniophotography.com
After 2 months without a launch, this was a beautiful early morning launch at 3:14 a.m. Sunday, the #SpaceX #CRS23 #Falcon9 sent a #CargoDragon capsule full of food, equipment, supplies and experiments to the Space Station. It was also the first booster to land on the new SpaceX automated droneship A Shortfall of Gravitas (ASOG).
SpaceX lit up the Florida skies this morning with the latest batch of Starlink 4-17 satellites at 5:42 a.m. EDT, from LC-39A on NASA's Kennedy Space Center. When the rocket exhaust is illuminated by the sun, it starts to look like a space jellyfish.
Beach, sun, surf & a rocket. What's not to like about Monday morning on the Space Coast as #SpaceX successfully launched the #Starlink payload atop a 3x flown (& 4x recovered!) #Falcon9 rocket, seen here from Playalinda Beach.
This is a shameless ripoff of John Kraus Photos' amazing shot, taken a few feet to my left. John's shot was terrific, and his choice to go with a B&W edit was great.
We drove north of where pretty much everyone else was watching and had hoped to get some lens compression on a shot of the rocket clearing the trees. It sounded good in concept, but the rocket was too far to the right of the spectators to be in the frame. Also, I may or may not have been pointing too far to the left to see the rocket rise above the trees...
Congrats to
@elonmusk
& the SpaceX team!
After 3 scrubs, it was a beautiful early morning SpaceX launch with Starlink-9 at 1:12 a.m. EDT. This is a composite of the previous two images
With the record setting 10th launch of booster B1051, SpaceX added another 60 broadband Starlink satellites to the fleet, not totaling more than 1600. Launch occurred at 2:42 a.m. EDT from SLC-40 on the Cape Canaveral Space Force Station
After 2 months without a launch, this was a beautiful early morning launch at 3:14 a.m. Sunday, the #SpaceX #CRS23 #Falcon9 sent a #CargoDragon capsule full of food, equipment, supplies and experiments to the Space Station. It was also the first booster to land on the new SpaceX automated droneship A Shortfall of Gravitas (ASOG).
Outside Lands Music Festival 2014
Golden Gate Park
San Francisco, CA
August 8th, 2014
All photos © Joshua Mellin per the guidelines listed under "Owner settings" to the right.
SpaceX launched another batch of 49 Starlink satellites yesterday at 4:49 p.m. EST, from LC-39A on the Kennedy Space Center.
Sierra Nevada Rocks, Mornington Peninsula, Victoria.
Fake Sky. Fake Colour, Real Postcode: TRUE.
Named after the Sierra Nevada which ran aground here.
153 second exposure of the Falcon9 rocket carrying the SES9 satellite, launched by SpaceX on March 4, 2016 from Cape Canaveral Air Force Station
Crewed spaceflight has returned to American soil for the first time in over 9 years today with the successful launch of Astronauts Doug Hurley and Bob Behnken aboard the SpaceX Crew Dragon and Falcon 9 rocket. This is a 50-second exposure of the rocket captured from the @45thSpaceWing and Cape Canaveral Air Force Station.
(Copyright Michael Seeley / National Geographic)
Thursday evening launch for SpaceX with the Korea Pathfinder Lunar Orbiter (KPLO) from SLC-40 on the Cape Canaveral Space Force Station at 7:08 p.m. EDT
SpaceX launches another batch of Starlink satellites from LC-39A on NASA's Kennedy Space Center at 1:13 p.m. EST.
SpaceX launches the Axiom-1 mission with 4 civilian astronauts to the ISS. The Falcon 9 lifted off from LC-39A on the Kennedy Space Center at 11:17 AM EDT. The Ax-1 crew members are retired NASA astronaut Commander Michael Lopez-Alegria, Pilot Larry Connor, and Mission Specialists Eytan Stibbe and Mark Pathy.
SpaceX + Demo2 + CrewDragon + LaunchAmerica = American astronauts, American rocket, American soil.
Wow, just, wow.
(Copyright: Michael Seeley / National Geographic)
Just as the laws of physics would espouse the triangles in the sky in the first photograph proceed through the sequence of pictures, each at Eight Seconds of open Shutter time, as a diminishing light trail that is visible approaching the horizon taking seemingly longer to recede from sight. The fixed observer through the camera pictures sees the triangles in one image and then their condensed light trail is seen again and again racing to the horizon. The curvature of path of the satellite and the curvature of the atmosphere of planet Earth combine to make the trajectory through the camera pictures appear to differ and to slow as it takes just the right amount of time to arc on and on returning and repeating the orbital trace of a near Earth bright object.
The triangle lights are being seen in many peoples photographs in 2023 to 2024. There are links to the triangular lights all over the web. With a host of Aurora Borealis hunters looking at the huge current surge in Aurora within the night sky the Triangles have been much seen and widely reported on all around The World. I see some reports that these lights are SpaceX Starlink satellites.
These pictures taken with Minolta16mm f2.8 Fisheye lens, Lightroom and other recognition software believes that it is SAL16F28 a Sony 16mm f2.8 Fisheye lens. There are no lens profile adjustments made to the images. Just as I do not make adjustments to the images to be treated as taken by a Sony Lens I do not try to find out how to undo any incorrect attribution. The two lenses could be very similar even near identical, all I know is that this wonder is from Minolta. This description is way too long, is it oft stated if I had more time then I would send better in fewer words?
© PHH Sykes 2024
phhsykes@gmail.com
Starlink satellites, the string of lights in the night sky.
youtu.be/GhLXCJ1Gyyc?si=qbiHOTm7PJ5FCeCq
Elon Musk’s Starlink satellites light up night sky
www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/crg1xn3pd4ro
Passage of Starlink Satellites Aug 28, 2023