Envy ISS: Une vue imprenable sur la Terre de la Station spatiale internationale avec leur fenêtre sur le monde offrant une vue imprenable de la Terre et de l'univers comme un tout. L'espace peut devenir la prochaine frontière pour les vacances. Si cela devient une réalité, et nous pouvons réserver un hôtel spatial avec un oeil dans le ciel surplombant la Terre. .
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Normally, we look up at amazing auroras,
but the ISS crew is fortunate enough to have and captures auroras like
this to give us an entirely different perspective of the phenomena. Photo #1 by NASA
Durrat Al Bahrain photographed by an
Expedition 26 crew member on the International Space Station. At the
southern end of Bahrain Island is a new complex of 14 artificial islands
designed for residential living and tourism with luxury hotels and
shopping malls. The Durrat Al Bahrain includes 21 square kilometers of
new surface area—for more than 1,000 residences—that has been designed
as The Islands. There are six “atolls” leading off five fish-shaped
“petals,” but we thought the one of the lower right looks a bit like
Pacman. Views from jet liners at high altitude—and orbital platforms
such as the International Space Station—are the only ways to fully
appreciate these spectacular sights. Photo #2 by NASA
Eruption of Cleveland Volcano, Aleutian
Islands, Alaska is featured in this image photographed by an Expedition
13 crewmember on the ISS. Visitors to outer space continually get to be
awed by nature’s beauty on Earth, but they also have a ringside seat for
all flavors of natural disasters. Photo #3 by NASA
A Russian Soyuz spacecraft, docked to the
International Space Station, is featured in this image photographed on
31 Jan. 2011 by an ISS Expedition 26 crew member. A blue and white part
of Earth and the blackness of space provide the backdrop for the scene. Photo #5 by NASA
Agricultural fields near Perdizes, Minas Gerais, Brazil as seen from the space station. Photo #6 by NASA
Room With a View – Window on the World. An
Expedition 26 crew member used a fish-eye lens to capture this image of
the Cupola of the International Space Station on (27 Jan. 2011). Photo #8 by NASA
Wildfires with smoke plumes faintly visible
in the night sky of Australia. The gold / green halo is atmospheric
airglow hanging above the horizon. Photo #10 by NASA / USGS
Agricultural crops in Aragon and Catalonia.
This image of north-eastern Spain looks a bit like a geometric hopscotch
or an agricultural quilt covering the Earth. Photo #11 by KARI (Korea Aerospace Research Institute)
Jules Verne ATV after undocking from the ISS.
Backdropped by a blue and white Earth, ESA’s Jules Verne Automated
Transfer Vehicle (lower left) appears to be very small as it continues
its relative separation from the International Space Station. Photo #13 by NASA
We looked at the Grand Canyon from an on-Earth perspective, but looking down at the Grand Canyon from the ISS and outer space is completely different. Photo #14 by NASA
It’s very faint, but the ISS crew captured this rainbow over the equatorial Pacific. Photo #15 by NASA / Visible Earth
This is but 1 of 16 sunrises ISS astronauts
see everyday! On Saturday, Aug. 27, 2011, International Space Station
astronaut Ron Garan used a high definition camera to film the rising sun
as the station flew along a path between Rio de Janeiro, Brazil and
Buenos Aires, Argentina. Photo #18 by NASA
While you’ve no doubt looked up at jet
trails, this is contrail graffiti over the North Sea. The Envisat MERIS
image over the North Sea captures numerous aircraft condensation trails,
or ‘contrails’, as well as parts of the Netherlands (upper right),
Belgium (lower right) and England (lower left). Photo #20 by ESA
When we think of Venice, we often imagine
romantic boat rides through canals. But this is the view from ‘outer
space.’ Floating City – The islands that make up the Italian city of
Venice and the surrounding Venetian Lagoon. Photo #22 by European Space Imaging (EUSI)
Eclipse View from the ISS. The International
Space Station was in position to view the umbral – ground – shadow cast
by the moon as it moved between Earth and the sun during a solar
eclipse. This astronaut image captures the umbral shadow across southern
Turkey, northern Cyprus and the Mediterranean Sea. Photo #23 by NASA
Kounotori2 Approaches Space Station. The
unpiloted Japanese Kounotori2 H-II Transfer Vehicle (HTV2) delivered
more than four tons of food and supplies to the space station and its
crew members. Photo #24 by NASA
ISS shot of Ariane 5 rocket, just after
liftoff from Europe’s Spaceport. The Expedition 26 crew had a special
interest in the occurrence. The ESA’s second Automated Transfer Vehicle,
Johannes Kepler, had launched a short time earlier for an eventual
link-up with the ISS. The unmanned supply ship delivered critical
supplies and reboost the space station during its almost four-month
mission. Photo #26 by NASA
The heart-shaped island of Galešnjak. The 500
m-wide island is situated off the Croatian coast in the Adriatic Sea,
between the city of Turanj (visible in white stretching along Croatia’s
mainland coast) and the Island of Pasman (bottom left). Other visible
islands include (left to right): Garmenjak (bottom), Mala Bisaga, Vela
Bisaga, Ricul and Komornik. Photo #27 by JAXA, ESA
Madagascar jellyfish taken from Japan’s ALOS
observation satellite and not the ISS, but still, what a wowza sight!
The red coloring of the sandbars and islands between the ‘jellyfish
tentacles’ comes from sediments washed from hills and into the streams
and rivers during heavy rain. Photo #28 by JAXA, ESA
ATV as seen by ESA astronaut Paolo Nespoli from the International Space Station. Photo #30 by ESA/NASA
A partly man-made island located in the Persian Gulf some 25 nautical miles northwest of Abu Dhabi. Photo #31 by JAXA, ESA
ISS eye to the universe – Tranquility.
Astronauts onboard the ISS acquired a new view of Earth after the space
shuttle Endeavour delivered the Tranquility module to the station.
Measuring 15 feet wide by 23 feet long, Tranquility holds some of the
station’s environmental control equipment, such as the system that
cleans carbon dioxide from the air, and it also provides living space
for exercise equipment and a bathroom. Tranquility also comes with a
cupola, a dome-shaped viewing port made up of seven windows. Photo #33 by NASA
Aurora Australis from space – RAW VISION:
Astronauts on the International Space Station film the aurora australis,
or “southern lights”, while passing over the Indian Ocean on September
17, 2011. #34
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