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PIX4638897 Colonized Moon - Colonized Moon - Illustratio
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PIX5940370 Moon above the Earth's Atmosphere - Moon above the atmosphere - The full moon observed from the International Space Station (ISS) on 18 July 2019. Moon above Earth's atmosphere is featured in this view, photographed by an Expedition 60 crewmember on the International Space Station. July 18, 2019.
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PIX5940372 Moon in the Earth Atmosphere - Moon with Earth atmosphere - Moon in the Earth Atmosphere seen from the International Space Station (ISS) on 18 July 2019. Moon above Earth's atmosphere is featured in this view, photographed by an Expedition 60 crewmember on the International Space Station. July 18, 2019.
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PIX6039513 Full moon rise above the atmosphere seen from the International Space Station (ISS) in 2016. The Full Moon is rising seen by an Expedition 48 crew member from the International Space Station.
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PIX4638831 Lunar base - Illustration - Moon base - artist's view - Artist view of a permanent base installed on the Moon. Moon base - artist's life
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PIX4639116 Back to the Moon - Back to the Moon - Artist view - Artist view of astronauts on the Moon near the lunar module. The return to the Moon is planned by the Americans around 2020. Astronauts beside the lunar module. The ongoing plan is to put humans back on the Moon, scheduled by 2020
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PIX4639388 Lunar exploration -Illustration - Back to the Moon - Artist view - Astronaut artist view on the Moon. Artwork representing astronauts on extravehicular activity on Moon surface
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PIX4675255 The Moon and Stars Above the Earth - Moon and starry sky over Earth - Artwork - The Moon and Stars Above the Earth's Atmosphere. Photomontage. Moon and starry sky over Earth's atmosphere - Artwor
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PIX4638804 Exploration of the Moon-Artist's View - Lunar exploration - Illustratio
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PIX4675227 The Moon above the Earth's Atmosphere - Last crescent moon above the atmosphere - The new moon observed from Space Shuttle Columbia on 25 October 1992. New moon above Earth's atmosphere is featured in this view, photographed by an astronaut in the space shuttle Columbia on october 25 1992
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PIX4580039 Earth as seen from the Moon - Illustration - Earth as seen from the Moon - Illustration - The Moon has no atmosphere to scatter sunlight, as a result the lunar sky appears velvety black, whether it is the middle of the day or midnight Selene time. Another consequence of the lack of an atmosphere is that surface temperatures vary widely, from 212o F during the day to minus 280o F at night
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PIX4675232 First crescent moon above the atmosphere - The new moon observed from the International Space Station on 31 July 2011. New moon above Earth's atmosphere is featured in this view, photographed by an Expedition 28 crewmember on the International Space Station. July 31, 2011
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PIX4675211 The Moon above the Earth's atmosphere - Gibbous moon above the atmosphere - The moon observed from the International Space Station (ISS). A gibbous moon above Earth's atmosphere is featured in this view, photographed by an Expedition 22 crewmember on the International Space Station (ISS)
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PIX4638748 Lunar base -Illustration - Lunar base - Illustration - Artist view of the construction of a permanent base on the Moon. An artists's rendering gives a possible preview of 21st century lunar base activity
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PIX4639346 Back to the Moon - Program constellation - Astronauts in a Lunar vehicle - Constellation program - View of an artist of astronauts exploring the surface of the Moon in a pressurized vehicle (Lunar Electric Rover), as part of the Nasa constellation program that is expected to take men to the Moon around 2020. A Lunar Electric Rover (LER), with crewmembers inside, performs work on the lunar surface in this art work depicting return to the moon activities
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PIX4638923 Stadium on the Moon - Artist's view - Lunar Stadium - Wrestling meeting in a stadium on the Moon. A wrestling meeting in a lunar stadium
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PIX4675124 Earth and Moon from Space - Moon over Earth - Moon and Earth's atmosphere seen from the International Space Station in 2001. Moon above Earth's atmosphere photographed by an Expedition 2 crewmember onboard the International Space Station (ISS)
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PIX4675215 The Moon above the Earth's atmosphere - Gibbous moon above the atmosphere - The moon observed from the International Space Station (ISS). A gibbous moon above Earth's atmosphere is featured in this view, photographed by an Expedition 22 crewmember on the International Space Station (ISS)
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STC2655277 engraved by Auguste-Henri Dufour (1795-1865) French astronomer.
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PIX4638733 Mining on the Moon-Artist's view - A lunar mining facility - Illustration - Artist's view of a lunar mine providing oxygen from the lunar basement. A lunar mining facility harvests oxygen from the resource-rich volcanic soil of the eastern Mare Serenitatis
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LAL453380 Earth from Space.
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PIX4675222 The Moon above the Earth's atmosphere - Gibbous moon above the atmosphere - The moon observed from the International Space Station (ISS). A gibbous moon above Earth's atmosphere is featured in this view, photographed by an Expedition 22 crewmember on the International Space Station (ISS)
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PIX4638785 Lunar base -Illustration - Lunar base - Illustratio
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PIX4628553 Earth during a Total Solar Eclipse - Earth during a Total Solar Eclipse - Artist's view of the planet Earth during the night, seen above the Indian Ocean. The artificial lights of the cities appear. On the right, the part illuminated by the Sun shows an area of shadow caused by a total eclipse of the Sun. The perspective in this image is looking down on the Indian Ocean from an altitude of 25,000 miles. On the Earth's night side artificial lights clearly define the Mediterranean Sea, Red Sea, and almost the entire African continent, while clouds obscure some of Europe and India. The alignment with the Moon and Sun is such that at this moment a total eclipse of the Sun is visible revealing the Sun's brilliant corona. However the area of totality, i.e., the darkest part of the Moon's shadow, is so small - - less than 200 miles wide - - that observers on the Earth would not be able to see this total eclipse. The only portion of the eclipse visible from the Earth is in the eastern Indian Ocean where the Moon's penumbra (partial shadow) falls, as can be seen in this image. The fact that total solar eclipses are visible at all is due in part to one of the most amazing coincidences in the Solar System: the Sun and the Moon appear from Earth to be about the same size in the sky. This is because the Sun's diameter is both 400 times that of the Moon's and is about 400 times as far away from the Earth. The result is that from the Earth, the Moon appears to just barely cover the Sun. If the Moon's diameter were reduced by just 6%, or if it were a little further away, it would never be large enough to ever completely cover the Sun
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PIX4614703 Earth and Moon - Artist view - Earth and Moon. Artwork - Earth's equatorial diameter is 12.756 km while the Moon's diameter is 3.476 km
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PIX4583414 Total Eclipse of the Sun - August 21, 2017 - Shade of the Moon - Total eclipse of the Sun - August 21, 2017: Photo of the shadow of the Moon seen from the International Space Station (ISS). The shadow of the moon above United States seen from ISS. Viewing the eclipse from orbit were Nasa's Randy Bresnik, Jack Fischer and Peggy Whitson, ESA (European Space Agency's) Paolo Nespoli, and Roscosmos' Commander Fyodor Yurchikhin and Sergey Ryazanskiy. The space station crossed the path of the eclipse three times as it orbited above the continental United States at an altitude of 250 miles
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UIS5094956 An Earth-like Moon, a Moon-like Earth, 1745. Engraving showing: the Mediterranean, and Asia Minor including Palestine, Arabia, Persia and Egypt (left); partial Moon (top centre); full Moon (bottom centre); a view of Earth with the Indian Ocean, Africa and Asia. Illustration from 'Mathematischer Atlas' (Mathematical atlas) by Tobias Mayer (1723-1762) published in Augsburg in 1745. Each plate has descriptive text on either side; some have contemporary hand colouring. Mayer was heavily influenced by Christian von Wolff's work, through which he had taught himself mathematics. The plates duplicate Wolff's choice of subjects - arithmetic, geometry, trigonometry, astronomy, geography, chronology, gnomonics, fortification, artillery, civil architecture, optics and mechanics. ©SSPL/Science Museum
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PIX4580041 Ice on the Moon - Illustration - Lunar ice - Illustration - Artist's view of ice on the surface of a crater that remains perpetually in the shade of the Sun, near the poles. Water from an encounter with an icy comet has collected in the perpetual shade of a deep crater where the temperature is a constant - 380o F. In 1998, the unmanned Lunar Prospector probe discovered evidence for water ice on the surface of the moon. Some scientists believe that as much as 10 to 300 million tons of ice may reside at the moon's North and South poles. The source of the ice is thought to be from one or more comets that struck the moon's surface four billion years ago. (It is thought that Earth's water may have come from comets as well.) Unfortunately, the moon's small size and lack of an atmosphere caused it to lose almost all of its accumulated water to space. Any water that does remain on the moon would likely be on the poles, hidden in craters and depressions shaded from the Sun
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PIX4597666 Apollo 16: Earth rise and control module - Apollo 16: Earthrise and command module - The control module of Apollo 16 in orbit, seen from the LEM, visible on the left horizon of the Earth. 21/04/1972. Pre - landing photo of Earthrise, with the Command Module visible just above the lunar horizon to the left of Earth
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PIX4597642 Apollo 16: Earth rise and control module - Apollo 16: Earthrise and command module - The control module of Apollo 16 in orbit, seen from the LEM, visible on the left horizon of the Earth. 21/04/1972. Pre - landing photo of Earthrise, with the Command Module visible just above the lunar horizon to the left of Earth
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PIX6039532 Artist view of the lunar module placed on the Moon. Artist's printing of astronauts walking on the moon near the lunar module. South pole of the moon.
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PIX4638762 Lunar base -Illustration - Lunar base - Illustration - Artist view of a base on the Moon serving as an outpost for an exploration of Mars. Earth's Moon, just 3 days away, is a good place to test hardware and operations for a human mission to Mars. A simulated mission, including the landing of an adapted Mars excursion vehicle, could test many relevant Mars systems and technologies
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PIX4638872 A spaceship takes a lunar vehicle - Artist's view - Space tug and lunar lander in Earth orbit - A tug spacecraft in Earth orbit takes a lunar vehicle to the Moon. With the space tug firmly docked with the lunar lander, the two will function as a single spacecraft for the duration of a 3-day trip to the moon. The pair would likely spend some time in Earth orbit prior to departure, checking systems and preparing the lander for its eventual journey to the Moon's surface. The lunar lander pictured here has capacity for a crew of four plus cargo. The space tug itself could have a crew of two, making the total crew capacity of the joined spacecraft about the same as today's Space Shuttle
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PIX4638880 Depart to the Moon - Artist view - Tug and lunar lander leaving Earth - Artist view - A spaceship leaves Earth orbit for a three-day journey to the Moon. Following a powerful burst from its primary thruster, a trans-moon space tug accelerates itself and the attached lunar lander into a much larger Earth orbit that will intercept the moon in about three days
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PIX4577225 First photograph of Earth and Moon - 23/08/1966 - First photograph of Earth from Moon. 23/08/1966 - First photograph of Earth and Moon obtained by the American probe Lunar Orbiter 1 on 23 August 1966. Version restored. First photograph of Earth from Moon taken by the Lunar Orbiter 1 spacecraft on august 23 1966. Image restored in 2008
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FEH328983 from 'God's Glorious Creation or The Mighty Marvels of Earth, Sea, and Sky' by Dr. Herman, J. Klein and Dr. Thome;
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PIX4675150 Gibbous moon above the atmosphere - The moon observed from the International Space Station on 11 May 2009. A gibbous moon above Earth's atmosphere is featured in this view, photographed by an Expedition 19 crewmember on the International Space Station. May 11 2009
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PIX4675226 Gibbous moon above the atmosphere - The moon observed from the International Space Station on 1 April 2010. A gibbous moon above Earth's atmosphere is featured in this view, photographed by an Expedition 23 crewmember on the International Space Station. April 1st 2010
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PIX4638841 Landing - Illustration - Lunar descent - A lunar module begins its descent on the Moon. A lunar lander begins its descent to the moon's surface from an altitude of 40,000 feet
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PIX4675193 Gibbous moon above Earth's atmosphere - Gibbous moon above Earth's atmosphere - Gibbous moon observed from space shuttle Discovery on 30 August 2009. A gibbous moon is visible above Earth's atmosphere, photographed by an STS - 128 crew member on the Space Shuttle Discovery during flight day three activities. 30 August 200
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LLM3651650 Earth as seen from Moon. Illustration for one of a set of cigarette cards on the subject of Romance of the Heavens, published by Wills's Cigarette cards, early 20th century.
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PIX4596027 Apollo 11: the LEM and the Earth - Apollo 11: Earth over the LM - Partial view of the LEM and the Earth. 20/07/1969
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PIX4614588 Earth and Moon - Artist view - Earth and Moon. Artwork - Earth with starry sky - Earth's equatorial diameter is 12.756 km while the Moon's diameter is 3.476 km
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PIX4640207 Space elevator - Artist view - Space elevator - Artist view - Elevator project connects to a space station in geostationary orbit. A space elevator linked to a space station in gestationary orbit
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LLM671679 Earth as seen from Moon. Illustration for early 20th century cigarette card.
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UIG532421 The first photograph of Earth taken from the vicinity of the Moon, captured by Lunar Orbiter 1, Aug. 23, 1966.
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PIX6039533 Illustration showing a concept of a future lunar base.
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LLM7163240 The earth as seen from the moon. Illustration for Popular Scientific Recreations by Gaston Tissandier (Ward Lock, 1885).
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LLM2809000 From Earth To The Moon. A cannonball would take eight days and five hours to get to the moon. The roar of a volcanic explosion would take thirty days and twenty hours. A railway train would arrive at the lunar station after thirty-eight weeks. When these machines are in action, how many days and hours will it take for a hundred quintals of Bonatti chocolate, starting from Milan, to reach the lunar markets? Illustration for Courier Sunday, 29 May-5 June 1921.
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PIX4577456 Earth and Moon - Artist view - Earth and Moon. Artwork - The Earth and the Moon represented on the scale (size but not distance) against the background of stars. Artist view of the Earth and the Moon showing their actual relative size (but not the actual distance between the two). Earth's equatorial diameter is 12,756 km while the Moon's diameter is 3,476 km. The Moon is actually one of the largest natural satellites in the Solar System, smaller only than Jupiter's Ganymede, Callisto and Io as well as Saturn's Titan, but bigger than Jupiter's Europa, Neptune's Triton and the planet Pluto
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PIX4638797 Lunar base -Illustration - Lunar base - Illustratio
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PIX4639391 Permanent station between the Earth and the Moon - Artist view - Lunar cycler at apogee - Artist view - Lunar Cycler is a space station placed in orbit between the Earth and the Moon whose trajectory would alternate between the Moon and the Earth. Once positioned in orbit, this gravitational assistance vessel would use very little fuel. This project would make a permanent link between the two stars. A lunar cycler has reached its furthest orbital point from the Earth - the apogee - and is rounding the far side of the Moon to begin its fall back towards Earth. At apogee the lunar cycler is about 300 thousand miles from the Earth and 50 thousand miles beyond the orbit of the Moon (further from Earth than any human has ventured yet). If frequent manned trips to the Moon become a reality, the earlier “” throw-away”” technologies of the Apollo lunar missions will be impractical for the long term. More efficient and reusable systems will need to be developed in order to minimize the labor and resources required for these extraordinary voyages. A journey to the Moon can be broken down into three basic tasks: transfer between the Earth's surface and Earth orbit, transfer between Earth orbit and lunar orbit, and transfer between lunar orbit and the Moon's surface. While the simplest solution may be a single vehicle that could do all three, no technology today or in the foreseeable future can meet all these needs. One solution would be to dedicate separate vehicles for each the three tasks. A reusable space shuttle would lift explorers off the Earth's surface, a dedicated and reusable lunar shuttle would deliver explorers to the Moon's surface and back, and in between there would be a kind of orbital way station. One such way station is known as an orbital cycler. An orbital cycler is a vehicle that's in a permanent orbit around two celestial masses. In the case of a lunar cycler, the orbit would include both the Eart
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PIX4638766 Lunar base -Illustration - Lunar base - Illustratio
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PIX4577425 Earthrise and Moon seen since LRO. 10/2015 - Earthrise and Moon as seen from LRO. 10/2015 - Earthrise above the Moon seen from Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter (LRO). Composite of images obtained on October 12, 2015. Nasa's Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter (LRO) captured a unique view of Earth from the spacecraft's vantage point in orbit around the moon. In this composite image we see Earth appear to rise over the lunar horizon from the viewpoint of the spacecraft, with the center of the Earth just off the coast of Liberia (at 4.04 degrees North, 12.44 degrees West). The large tan area in the upper right is the Sahara Desert, and just beyond is Saudi Arabia. The Atlantic and Pacific coasts of South America are visible to the left. On the moon, we get a glimpse of the crater Compton, which is located just beyond the eastern limb of the moon, on the lunar farside. LRO was launched on June 18, 2009, and has collected a treasure trove of data with its seven powerful instruments, making an invaluable contribution to our knowledge about the moon. LRO experiences 12 earthrises every day; however the spacecraft is almost always busy imaging the lunar surface so only rarely does an opportunity arise such that its camera instrument can capture a view of Earth. Occasionally LRO points off into space to acquire observations of the extremely thin lunar atmosphere and perform instrument calibration measurements. During these movements sometimes Earth (and other planets) pass through the camera's field of view and dramatic images such as the one shown here are acquired. This image was composed from a series of images taken Oct. 12, when LRO was about 83 miles (134 kilometers) above the moon's farside crater Compton. Capturing an image of the Earth and moon with LRO's Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter Camera (LROC) instrument is a complicated task. First the spacecraft must be rolled to the side (in this case 67 degrees), then the spacecraft slews with the direction of travel
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PIX4638967 Back to the Moon: Artist view from the departure to the Moon - The Orion spacecraft onward to Moon - Artist view - The module inhabit Orion is docked to the planing module in Earth orbit and propels to the moon through a stage of the Ares 5 rocket. Ares 5 is a cargo rocket that will be used around 2020 to carry the landing module as well as the various elements needed to build a base on the Moon. The Orion manned spacecraft, docked to the lunar module in lunar orbit, propelled by an Ares 5 stage rocket towards the Moon. The Nasa's Project Constellation plans to send human explorers back to the Moon by 2020, and then onward to Mars; each Orion spacecraft will carry a crew of four to six astronauts
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PIX4598191 Apollo 17: E. Cernan on the Moon - Apollo 17: E. Cernan near the US flag - Gene Cernan, Commander Apollo 17, holds the American flag. 11/12/1972. EVA - 1 at the LM. Photo of Gene with the Earth above him. Note the checklist on the top of his glove, and the watch strap on his arm, just above the top of his glove
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PIX4597828 Apollo 17: the LEM - Apollo 17: the Earth over the LM - View of the Apollo 17 lunar module and Earth. 12/197
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PIX4638850 Living in a lunar base - Illustration - Living in a lunar base - A young radio astronomer in a base near the southern pole of the Moon receives flowers sent from Earth as a welcome gift. A young radio astronomer stationed near the Moon's South Pole receives a welcome gift from Earth. Amid the techno-clutter of an office where livable real estate is at an extreme premium, this Selenite pauses to smell the flowers. Some day our great grandchildren may participate in the first long-term settlements on the Earth's Moon. Given the extreme hostility of the lunar environment - no atmosphere, no protection from the fierce solar wind or interstellar cosmic rays - such settlements are likely to be relatively small, enclosed environments and almost wholly dependent upon the Earth for sustenance
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PIX4577347 Apollo 12: Earth and Moon - Apollo 12: the Earth and the Moon - The Earth seen from the Apollo 12 control module. November 1969. A partially illuminated Earth rises above the lunar horizon in this photograph taken from the Apollo 12 spacecraft in lunar orbit. Nov 1969
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LAL269756
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PIX4675177 The Moon Above the Earth's Atmosphere - Half moon above Earth's atmosphere - Quarter de lune observed from the International Space Station (ISS) in July 2009. A last quarter moon above Earth's atmosphere is featured in this view, photographed by an Expedition 20 crewmember on the International Space Station in july 2009
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PIX4614529 The hidden face of the Moon and the Earth seen from DSCOVR. 07/2016 - Far side of the Moon with Earth seen from DSCOVR. 07/2016: This image obtained on July 5, 2016, the moon again passed between DSCOVR and the Earth. EPIC snapped these images over a period of about 4 hours. In this set, the far side of the moon, which is never seen from Earth, passes by. In the backdrop, Earth rotates, starting with the Australia and Pacific and gradually revealing Asia and Africa
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PIX4638817 Lunar base - Illustration - Lunar shuttle prepares for touchdown - A shuttle ready to land on a lunar base. A dedicated lunar shuttle descends towards a manned outpost on the Moon's southern hemisphere
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PIX4598183 Apollo 17: US flag and Earth - Apollo 17: US flag with Earth - View of the American flag and Earth. 12/12/1972
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PIX4629930 Terre Lune et Soleil - artist view - Earth Moon and Sun - Artwork
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PIX4675181 The Moon Above the Earth's Atmosphere - Half moon above Earth's atmosphere - Quarter de lune observed from the International Space Station (ISS) in July 2009. A last quarter moon above Earth's atmosphere is featured in this view, photographed by an Expedition 20 crewmember on the International Space Station in july 2009
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PIX4577428 The hidden face of the Moon and the Earth seen from DSCOVR. 07/2015 - Far side of the Moon with Earth seen from DSCOVR. 07/2015 - This image obtained on July 16, 2015 by the Deep Space Climate Observatory (DSCOVR) satellite shows the passage of the Moon and its face hidden from the Earth. The distance between DSCOVR and Earth is about 1.5 million kilometres. The Moon was approximately 400,000 kilometres from Earth, so it was closer to DSCOVR and therefore appears larger than it is in relation to Earth. This image shows the far side of the moon, illuminated by the sun, as it crosses between the Deep Space Climate Observatory (DSCOVR) spacecraft's Earth Polychromatic Imaging Camera (EPIC) camera and telescope, and the Earth - one million miles away. Because the moon has moved in relation to the Earth between the time the first (red) and last (green) exposures were made, a thin green offset appears on the right side of the moon when the three exposures are combined. July 16 2015
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PIX4629935 Terre Lune et Soleil - artist view - Earth Moon and Sun - Artwork
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PIX4638953 Lunar base - Illustration - Lunar base - Illustration - In the middle of the 21st century, an international base is permanently occupied on the Moon
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PIX4577293 Earth and the Moon - Apollo 8 - December 1968 - Earthrise from Apollo 8 spacecraft - Earthrise seen from the control module of Apollo 8 in orbit around the Moon. High - oblique view of the moon's surface showing Earth rising above the lunar horizon, looking west - southwest, as photographed from the Apollo 8 spacecraft as it orbited the moon. The center of the picture is located at about 105 degrees east longitude and 13 degrees south latitude
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PIX5940226 Lunar Base - Illustration - Moon Village - Illustration showing a concept of a future lunar base with solar panels for energy, greenhouses for food production, and habitats protected by regolith. Solar arrays for energy generation, greenhouses for food production and habitats shielded with regolith.
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PIX4614538 The hidden face of the Moon and the Earth seen from DSCOVR. 07/2016 - Far side of the Moon with Earth seen from DSCOVR. 07/2016: This image obtained on July 5, 2016, the moon again passed between DSCOVR and the Earth. EPIC snapped these images over a period of about 4 hours. In this set, the far side of the moon, which is never seen from Earth, passes by. In the backdrop, Earth rotates, starting with the Australia and Pacific and gradually revealing Asia and Africa
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PIX4614577 Earth and Moon - Artist's View - Earth's equatorial diameter is 12,756 km while the Moon's diameter is 3,476 km
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PIX4614527 The hidden face of the Moon and the Earth seen from DSCOVR. 07/2016 - Far side of the Moon with Earth seen from DSCOVR. 07/2016: This image obtained on July 5, 2016, the moon again passed between DSCOVR and the Earth. EPIC snapped these images over a period of about 4 hours. In this set, the far side of the moon, which is never seen from Earth, passes by. In the backdrop, Earth rotates, starting with the Australia and Pacific and gradually revealing Asia and Africa
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PIX4639027 Back to the Moon: the Orion module in lunar orbit - The Orion spacecraft in lunar orbit - Artist view - The module lives in Orion orbit around the Moon. Orion should be able to take a crew of four astronauts to the Moon in 2020 and could be used to take men to Mars. Artist's view. The Orion manned spacecraft in lunar orbit. The Nasa's Project Constellation plans to send human explorers back to the Moon by 2020, and then onward to Mars; each Orion spacecraft will carry a crew of four to six astronauts
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PIX4639037 Back to the Moon: the Orion module in lunar orbit - Artist view - The Orion spacecraft in lunar orbit - Lunar program Constellation. The module lives in Orion orbit around the Moon. Orion should be able to take a crew of four astronauts to the Moon in 2020 and could be used to take men to Mars. Artist's concept of the Orion manned spacecraft in lunar orbit. The Nasa's Project Constellation plans to send human explorers back to the Moon by 2020, and then onward to Mars; each Orion spacecraft will carry a crew of four to six astronauts
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STC2655278 engraved by Auguste-Henri Dufour (1795-1865) French astronomer.
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PIX4614519 The hidden face of the Moon and the Earth seen from DSCOVR. 07/2016 - Far side of the Moon with Earth seen from DSCOVR. 07/2016: This image obtained on July 5, 2016, the moon again passed between DSCOVR and the Earth. EPIC snapped these images over a period of about 4 hours. In this set, the far side of the moon, which is never seen from Earth, passes by. In the backdrop, Earth rotates, starting with the Australia and Pacific and gradually revealing Asia and Africa
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PIX5940229 Lunar Base - Illustration - Moon Village - Illustration showing a concept of a future lunar base with solar panels for energy, greenhouses for food production, and habitats protected by regolith. Power generation from solar cells, food production in greenhouses and construction using mobile 3D printer-rovers.
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PIX4640471 Solar Sails - Artist View - Solar sails - Artist view - Artist view of probes using solar wind and photons emitted by the Sun as a means of propulsion. Solar sails race between the Earth and Moon
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PIX4638734 Lunar base -Illustration - Lunar base - Illustratio
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PIX4639638 Mission to Phobos - Phobos mission ignition - The spaceship en route to Phobos, one of Mars's satellites. A Phobos mission rocket ignites its chemical thrusters to propel it away from the Earth into a large solar orbit that will intercept March in approximately 7 months
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PIX5940230 Lunar Base - Illustration - Moon Village - Illustration showing a concept of a future lunar base with solar panels for energy, greenhouses for food production, and habitats protected by regolith. Prospecting activities in a Moon Base
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PIX4583881 An asteroid threatens the Earth - Artist's view - Asteroid threatening the Earth - Artist vie
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PIX4638985 Back to the Moon: artist's view from the start to the Moon - The Orion spacecraft onward to Moon - Lunar program Constellation. The module inhabited Orion is secured to the planing module in Earth orbit and propels to the moon through a stage of the Ares 5 rocket. Ares 5 is a cargo rocket that will be used around 2020 to carry the landing module as well as the various elements needed to build a base on the Moon. This is a NASA artist's rendering of the Orion crew exploration vehicle docking with the Altair lunar lander, contained within the earth departure stage of an Ares V rocket. This rendezvous will take place in low earth orbit before the earth departure stage, Orion and Altair make the transit towards the moon. The earth departure stage will be discarded on the way
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PIX4638930 Back to the Moon: the Ares 1 and Ares 5 fusees - Illustration of Ares I and Ares V Launch Vehicles - Lunar Programme Constellation. Artist's view of the two future launchers Ares 1 and Ares 5 (right). Ares 5 is a cargo rocket that will be used around 2020 to carry the landing module as well as the various elements needed to build a base on the Moon. Ares 1, previewed to operate from 2014, will take the inhabited capsule Orion, first to the destination of the international space station, then towards the moon. Lunar program Constellation. Artwork of the future launchers Ares 1 and Ares 5. Ares 1 (left) is the crew launch vehicle; it will carry Orion capsule to ISS in 2014. The larger, unmanned Ares V will be the cargo launch vehicle for project Constellation
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PIX4629885 Terre Lune et Soleil - artist view - Earth Moon and Sun - Artwork
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PIX5940228 Lunar Base - Illustration - Moon Village - Illustration showing a concept of a future lunar base with solar panels for energy, greenhouses for food production, and habitats protected by regolith. Power generation from solar cells, food production in greenhouses and construction using mobile 3D printer-rovers.
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PIX4577307 Earthrise and Moon seen from Apollo 11. 07/1969 - Earthrise seen from Columbia control module during its passage at the desus of the Smyth Sea. 20/07/1969 View of the Earthrise from the command module Columbia. This picture was taken as Columbia was passing over Mare Smythii. July 20 196
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PIX4638999 Back to the Moon: artist's view from the start to the Moon - The Orion spacecraft onward to Moon - Artist view - Lunar program Constellation. The module inhabited Orion is secured to the planing module in Earth orbit and propels to the moon through a stage of the Ares 5 rocket. Ares 5 is a cargo rocket that will be used around 2020 to carry the landing module as well as the various elements needed to build a base on the Moon. Nasa's Constellation Program is getting to work on the new spacecraft that will return humans to the moon and blaze a trail to Mars and beyond. This artist's rendering represents a concept of departure stage engines firing to take a crew exploration vehicle (CEV) and a lunar lander out of Earth's orbit
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PIX4639036 Back to the Moon: artist's view from the start to the Moon - The Orion spacecraft onward to Moon - Lunar program Constellation. The module inhabited Orion is secured to the planing module in Earth orbit and propels to the moon through a stage of the Ares 5 rocket. Ares 5 is a cargo rocket that will be used around 2020 to carry the landing module as well as the various elements needed to build a base on the Moon. This is a NASA artist's rendering of the Orion crew exploration vehicle docking with the Altair lunar lander, contained within the earth departure stage of an Ares V rocket. This rendezvous will take place in low earth orbit before the earth departure stage, Orion and Altair make the transit towards the moon. The earth departure stage will be discarded on the way
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PIX4583907 An asteroid threatens the artist's Earth-View - Asteroid threatening the Earth - Artist vie
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PIX4577433 The hidden face of the Moon and the Earth seen from DSCOVR. 07/2015 - Far side of the Moon with Earth seen from DSCOVR. 07/2015 - This image obtained on July 16, 2015 by the Deep Space Climate Observatory (DSCOVR) satellite shows the passage of the Moon and its face hidden from the Earth. The distance between DSCOVR and Earth is about 1.5 million kilometres. The Moon was approximately 400,000 kilometres from Earth, so it was closer to DSCOVR and therefore appears larger than it is in relation to Earth. This image shows the far side of the moon, illuminated by the sun, as it crosses between the Deep Space Climate Observatory (DSCOVR) spacecraft's Earth Polychromatic Imaging Camera (EPIC) camera and telescope, and the Earth - one million miles away. July 16 2015
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PIX4577274 Apollo 8: first earth lift photography by a human - Earthrise from Apollo 8 spacecraft - Earthrise seen from the control module of Apollo 8 on 24/12/1968. First picture of an Earth-rise taken by a human. The first photograph of Earthrise taken by a human. Taken looking across crater Pasteur. Pasteur G in foreground
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PIX4675110 Earth/Moon from Shuttle 12/9
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PIX4675049 Earth - Moon from Shuttle 11/96 - Earth and Moon in Atmosphere seen by Shuttle Columbia in November 1996
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PIX4633451 The Formation of the Earth and the Moon - Young Earth and Moon - The young Earth draped with thick clouds is illuminated by lightning and the reddish glow of volcanoes. Still surrounded by the remains of the primitive nebula, it will wait another 500 million years to cool sufisciously, form a solid crust and develop a primitive atmosphere. Top right is the Moon, still covered in molten lava. A young Earth is shrouded in turbulent, roiling clouds, while under the shadow of its night side can be seen flashes of lightning and the ruddy glow of volcanoes and lava fields illuminating the clouds from beneath. The space around the Earth is highlighted by remnants of the nebula from which the Solar System was born. On the upper right is the Earth's Moon whose lava - filled scars from massive impacts are still cooling. 500 million years after its molten birth the Earth's surface would have cooled enough for a solid crust to form, and gases delivered by comets and emissions from within would have contributed to the Earth's first, albeit primitive, atmosphere
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PIX4571471 A comete approaches the Sun - Illustration - Comet near our Sun - artwork - Artist's view of the comete McNaught near the Earth and the Sun eclipse through the Moon. Comet Mcnaught makes its close approach to Earth in early 2007. It is New Moon and we are situated in a position above Earth where the moon eclipses the sun
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UIG1578664 Futuristic vision of how a moon bound spacecraft (rocket) would take off to return from the Moon to the Earth. 1936
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XJF133388
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Total de Resultados: 517

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