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Coca-Cola Zero 8 Hours of Suzuka 2013 on Thursday 25 July to Sunday 28 July 2013 in Suzuka, Japan
The Coca-Cola Zero Suzuka 8 Hours Endurance Road Race is a motorcycle endurance race held at the Suzuka Circuit in Japan each year.
The race runs for eight hours consecutively and teams are composed of two riders and one alternate.
Team Andreas with Andreas Mikkelsen and Andreas Nergaard in Zero Rally 2011.
Here racing at Vålerbanen.
Foto: Eirik Helland Urke
Henning Solberg and Maud Solberg in Zero Rally 2011. Here in the last special stage, autoslalom in Oslo.
Foto: Eirik Helland Urke
The live finals of the 2016 Zero Robotics High School Tournament took place on the International Space Station on 27 January 2017. More than 100 students aged between 14 and 20 years old from across Europe met at ESA’s Space Research and Technology Centre (ESTEC) in the Netherlands. From there, students connected to the ISS, as well as to parallel events taking place in the USA and Australia. This is the fifth time that the ISS has been turned into a gaming platform for the ultimate game of robotics.
Team Andreas with Andreas Mikkelsen and Andreas Nergaard in Zero Rally 2011.
Hillracing in Lysgårdsbakken at Lillehammer.
Foto: Eirik Helland Urke
Kiteboarders ride in near zero visibility as a thick fog blanketed the Charleston area as temperatures rose into the 70's following a brush with the arctic vortex earlier in the week January 11, 2014 in Sullivan's Island, SC.
The live finals of the 2016 Zero Robotics High School Tournament took place on the International Space Station on 27 January 2017. More than 100 students aged between 14 and 20 years old from across Europe met at ESA’s Space Research and Technology Centre (ESTEC) in the Netherlands. From there, students connected to the ISS, as well as to parallel events taking place in the USA and Australia. This is the fifth time that the ISS has been turned into a gaming platform for the ultimate game of robotics.
The live finals of the 2016 Zero Robotics High School Tournament took place on the International Space Station on 27 January 2017. More than 100 students aged between 14 and 20 years old from across Europe met at ESA’s Space Research and Technology Centre (ESTEC) in the Netherlands. From there, students connected to the ISS, as well as to parallel events taking place in the USA and Australia. This is the fifth time that the ISS has been turned into a gaming platform for the ultimate game of robotics.
The live finals of the 2016 Zero Robotics High School Tournament took place on the International Space Station on 27 January 2017. More than 100 students aged between 14 and 20 years old from across Europe met at ESA’s Space Research and Technology Centre (ESTEC) in the Netherlands. From there, students connected to the ISS, as well as to parallel events taking place in the USA and Australia. This is the fifth time that the ISS has been turned into a gaming platform for the ultimate game of robotics.