Wednesday 13 June 2012

Space Pictures


Following a Moon Shadow



Seen from one of Japan's MTSAT meteorological satellites, the shadow of the moon darkens part of the North Pacific during the annular solar eclipse last Sunday and Monday. Despite the diminutive shadow shown, the moon is actually a little bigger than a quarter the size of Earth.
An annular eclipse happens when the moon lines up between Earth and thesun, and when the dark moon's apparent diameter is smaller than the visible disk of the sun, leaving a ring—or annulus—of fiery light around the edges.


Milky Way Visitor



Echoing the arc of the Milky Way (center), a meteor—or possibly a satellite reflecting the sun's rays—streaks earthward near Cagnes-sur-mer in southeastern France in a picture submitted May 17 by National Geographic Your Shot user Jerome Cassou.
Meteors are mostly sand grain-size particles that enter Earth's atmosphere at high speed, burning up and superheating the air around them, which creates the characteristic short-lived streaks of light.



Fiery Crescent


Captured from about 400 miles (630 kilometers) above Earth by Japan's Hinode satellite, the moon moves into position for the May 20-21 annular solar eclipse.
Before the eclipse, astronomer Anthony Cook, of the Griffith Observatory in California, had predicted that scientists would make use of the event to study the sun's activity. Hinode's handlers also used the eclipse to gather data to improve the craft's ability to image subtle features in the sun's corona, or upper atmosphere, according to NASA.

Losing Power


Carrying Russian and U.S. astronauts to the International Space Station, a Russian Soyuz spaceship jettisons rocket boosters after launching from the Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan on May 15.
Currently the Russian spaceships are NASA's only means of ferrying astronauts to the space station. This week's successful launch of the first private craft toward the space station, though, hints that the U.S. space agency may have another option for manned spaceflight as early as 2015.





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