Busque também em nossas outras coleções:

Data da imagem:
Pauta
Agência
Fotógrafo
Pais
Cidade
Tipo de licença
Orientação
Coleção

Total de Resultados: 6

Página 1 de 1

ny101222190306 An undated photo provided by NASA of Earth, photographed from the Orion space capsule. The capsule, this time with no astronauts aboard, will splash down on Sunday afternoon after a 26-day journey that took it to the moon and back. (NASA via The New York Times) ? FOR EDITORIAL USE ONLY
DC
ny190719124004 A photo provided by NASA shows Earth as seen from the Apollo 11 lunar mission in July 1969. Could a Òmoon shotÓ for climate change cool a warming planet? Fifty years after humans first left bootprints in the lunar dust, itÕs an enticing idea. The effort and the commitment of brainpower and money, and the glorious achievement itself, shine as an international example of what people can do when they set their minds to it. The spinoff technologies ended up affecting all of our lives. (NASA via The New York Times) -- FOR EDITORIAL USE ONLY. --
DC
ny030719110206 A man watches the solar eclipse from the hills outside Mogna, Argentina, on Tuesday, July 2, 2019. Late on Tuesday afternoon, the shadow of the moon swept along a narrow arc of Earth in parts of Chile and Argentina. (Tali Kimelman/The New York Times/Fotoarena)
DC
ny030719105805 A man watches the solar eclipse from the hills outside Mogna, Argentina, on Tuesday, July 2, 2019. Late on Tuesday afternoon, the shadow of the moon swept along a narrow arc of Earth in parts of Chile and Argentina. (Tali Kimelman/The New York Times/Fotoarena)
DC
ny080118172212 A photo from NASA of the Earth, as seen from the moon, during the Apollo 8 mission, Dec. 24, 1968. Dec. 21, 2018, marks the 50th anniversary when Frank Borman, James Lovell Jr. and William Anders went round the moon and back in a lunar orbit that set the stage for 1969?s Apollo 11 mission. (NASA via The New York Times) ? FOR EDITORIAL USE ONLY ?
DC
ny180917141404 In a handout photo, inspecting the solar array cooling system for the Parker Solar Probe spacecraft at NASA Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Md., in February, 2017. Launching in the summer of 2018, NASAÕs Parker Solar Probe will become EarthÕs first spacecraft to ever reach a star. It will fly within about 4 million miles of the sunÕs surface, braving the brutal heat and destructive radiation of its outermost atmosphere, known as the corona. (NASA/Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory via The New York Times) -- FOR EDITORIAL USE ONLY. --
DC

Total de Resultados: 6

Página 1 de 1