Category: Image of the day

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  • Space Station's Expandable Habitat

    Space Station's Expandable Habitat

    The Bigelow Expandable Activity Module (BEAM) is seen attached to the Tranquility module of the International Space Station. BEAM is an is an experimental expandable habitat. Expandable habitats, occasionally described as inflatable habitats, greatly decrease the amount of transport volume for future space missions.

  • Testing the James Webb Space Telescope Pathfinder

    Testing the James Webb Space Telescope Pathfinder

    In this photograph taken on Sept. 1, 2016, the James Webb Space Telescope Pathfinder structure has been configured for the Thermal Pathfinder Test at NASA Johnson Space Center’s giant thermal vacuum chamber, called Chamber A. The Pathfinder is a test version of the structure that supports the telescope.

  • 'Pandora's Cluster' Seen by Spitzer

    'Pandora's Cluster' Seen by Spitzer

    This image of galaxy cluster Abell 2744, also called Pandora’s Cluster, was taken by the Spitzer Space Telescope.

  • Water Swirls, Gulf of St. Lawrence

    Water Swirls, Gulf of St. Lawrence

    Orbiting above eastern North America, a crew member on the International Space Station photographed a dense pattern of eddies in the Gulf of St. Lawrence. Caught briefly in the Sun’s “glint point,” reflections off the water surface show an interlinked mass of swirls and eddies in the shallow water north of Prince Edward Island.

  • Tectonically Active Planet Mercury

    Tectonically Active Planet Mercury

    New NASA-funded research suggests that Mercury is contracting even today, joining Earth as a tectonically active planet. Images obtained by NASA’s MESSENGER spacecraft reveal previously undetected small fault scarps— cliff-like landforms that resemble stair steps.

  • Hubble Views a Colorful Demise of a Sun-like Star

    Hubble Views a Colorful Demise of a Sun-like Star

    This star is ending its life by casting off its outer layers of gas, which formed a cocoon around the star’s remaining core.

  • Practicing Orion Spacecraft Recovery After Splashdown

    Practicing Orion Spacecraft Recovery After Splashdown

    A group of U.S. Navy divers, Air Force pararescuemen and Coast Guard rescue swimmers practice Orion underway recovery techniques in the Neutral Buoyancy Laboratory at NASA’s Johnson Space Center to prepare for the first test flight of an uncrewed Orion spacecraft with the agency’s Space Launch System rocket during Exploration Mission (EM-1).

  • One Billion Base Pairs Sequenced on the Space Station

    One Billion Base Pairs Sequenced on the Space Station

    NASA astronaut Kate Rubins checks a sample for air bubbles prior to loading it in the biomolecule sequencer. When Rubins’ expedition began, zero base pairs of DNA had been sequenced in space. Within just a few weeks, she and the Biomolecule Sequencer team had sequenced their one billionth base of DNA aboard the orbiting laboratory.

  • Space Station Flight Over the Southern Tip of Italy

    Space Station Flight Over the Southern Tip of Italy

    The southern tip of Italy is visible in this image taken by the Expedition 49 crew aboard the International Space Station on Sept. 17, 2016. The brightly lit city of Naples can be seen in the bottom section of the image. A Russian Soyuz spacecraft can be seen in the foreground.

  • Where the Small Moon Rules

    Where the Small Moon Rules

    Pan may be small as satellites go, but like many of Saturn’s ring moons, it has a has a very visible effect on the rings.

  • NASA's IceBridge Observes Effects of Summer Melt on Greenland Ice Sheet

    NASA's IceBridge Observes Effects of Summer Melt on Greenland Ice Sheet

    NASA’s IceBridge, an airborne survey of polar ice, flew over the Helheim/Kangerdlugssuaq region of Greenland on Sept. 11, 2016. This photograph from the flight captures Greenland’s Steenstrup Glacier, with the midmorning sun glinting off of the Denmark Strait in the background.

  • Infrared Echoes of a Black Hole Eating a Star

    Infrared Echoes of a Black Hole Eating a Star

    This illustration shows a glowing stream of material from a star, disrupted as it was being devoured by a supermassive black hole. The feeding black hole is surrounded by a ring of dust. This dust was previously illuminated by flares of high-energy radiation from the feeding black hole, and is now shown re-radiating some of that energy.

  • Sept. 14, 1966 – View From Gemini XI, 850 Miles Above the Earth

    Sept. 14, 1966 – View From Gemini XI, 850 Miles Above the Earth

    The western half of Australia, looking west, as seen from the Gemini XI spacecraft, 850 miles above the Earth on Sept. 14, 1966. Reaching this record-shattering altitude was a highlight of a demanding, three-day mission for Gemini XI command pilot Charles “Pete” Conrad and pilot Dick Gordon.