Space can be a wondrous place, and we’ve got the pictures to prove it! Take a look at our favorite space pictures here, and if you’re wondering what happened to today in space history don’t miss our On This Day in Space video show here!
Suni beaming with an Astrobee
Wednesday, December 18, 2024: What could be better than NASA astronaut Suni Williams floating aboard the International Space Station with Bumble, the blue, bunny-eared Astrobee. Bumble is one of three cube-shaped robo-helpers developed by NASA to assist astronauts aboard the space station. The free-flying robots perform various tasks, including documenting experiments or taking inventory, and are able to navigate, dock and recharge themselves autonomously within the orbiting lab.
NASA astronaut Suni Williams, who is currently serving as Expedition 72 Commander on the ISS, smiles for a photo with the robotic flyer in the Kibo laboratory module in a new image shared by NASA. Williams can be seen imitating the robot’s curved arms, which are being tested to wrap around objects for satellite maintenance and space debris management.
Read more: NASA astronaut Suni Williams poses with adorable tentacle-armed Astrobee robot on ISS
Feel the burn this season
Tuesday, December 17, 2024: If you’re not yet in the holiday spirit, NASA is here to bring you the rest of the way. The space agency created a virtual fireplace lit by the engines of its huge Space Launch System (SLS) rocket, which sent the uncrewed Artemis 1 mission to the moon in November 2022.
In this photo, the fireplace can be seen displayed on NASA’s mission countdown clock at the Kennedy Space Center, in Florida, with one of the world’s largest buildings, the Vehicle Assembly Building (VAB), standing tall in the background.
Read more: Warm up this holiday season with NASA’s new SLS rocket engine fireplace (video)
Observe the Geminids!
Monday, December 16, 2024: In Hawaii, astronomers with Japan’s Subaru Telescope atop Maunakea in captured a stunning image of more than 100 Geminid meteors streaking across star trails in a long-exposure view from the observatory’s camera.
“The Subaru-Asahi Star Camera at the Subaru Telescope Facility, Maunakea, Hawai‘i, captured over 150 meteors in one hour from 1:10 to 2:10 a.m. on December 13, 2024 (HST) despite the bright moonlight, as shown in this summary picture,” officials with the observatory said on X, formerly Twitter, while sharing the photo. “Most meteors belong to Geminids.”
Read more: See the best Geminid meteor shower 2024 photos from around the world
A satellite’s circle of aurora
Thursday, December 12, 2024: As the year approaches its end, everyone is rounding up their best images of 2024. The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) is joining in, asking social media users to help choose their “most compelling” satellite image.
Pictured here, a Day-Night Band image from NOAA’s JPSS Program satellites, showing Earth’s northern hemisphere from above, crowned in a ring of aurora borealis.
Saturn’s elusive dark ring spokes
Wednesday, December 11, 2024: NASA is celebrating ten years of the Hubble Space Telescope’s Outer Planter Atmospheres Legacy (OPAL) program, which helps track weather and seasonal changes in the atmospheres of our solar system’s gas giants. One of OPAL’s observations has helped astronomers Saturn’s elusive dark ring spokes. First discovered by NASA’s Voyager mission in the 1980s, these dark rings only last for two or three rotations around Saturn. Thanks to Hubble, astronomers now know the rings to be a seasonally-driven phenomenon.
Through a Dragon’s eye
Tuesday, December 10, 2024: Through the window of a SpaceX Crew Dragon spacecraft, the small structure of the International Space Station (ISS) can be seen flying above the clouds below. This photo was taken by a Crew-8 astronaut as their Dragon spacecraft undocked and departed the ISS above the Pacific Ocean, off the coast of Chile.
Moon photobombs atmospheric probe test
Monday, December 9, 2024: NASA photographer Steve Freeman caught a lucky shot of the moon photobombing a drone carrying a model of an atmospheric probe being developed by NASA’s Armstrong Flight Research Center in Edwards, California. The quad rotor carried the probe to a test altitude before releasing it over Rogers Dry Lake, a flight test area next to the NASA center.
That’s no moon…
Wednesday, December 4, 2024: Well, yeah, it’s definitely not a moon, but it does sort of looks like a half-assembled Death Star in “Star Wars: Return of the Jedi”, which is also not a moon. This is, in fact, the European Southern Observatory’s (ESO’s) Extremely Large Telescope (ELT) under construction. The skeleton of one of ESO’s flagship cosmic imager for the coming decades can be seen here coming together piece by piece in the mountains of Chile’s Atacama Desert. Once complete, ELT’s enormous primary mirror will measure 128 feet (39 meters) across.
The cupola the keeps on giving
Tuesday, December 4, 2024: Few things beat the view of a good sunset, even when that view happens on repeat 16 times a day. Thanks to the altitude and inclination of the International Space Station’s orbit, that’s exactly how many sunsets astronauts living aboard the orbital lab get to experience. In this photo, NASA astronaut Tracy Dyson peers out the station’s cupola module as the sun sinks behind the shadowy face of Earth’s night side. 262 miles below, the blue tint of the South Atlantic Ocean paints the faded arch of Earth’s horizon with a soft glow, lit from the falling sun like Dyson’s face as she stares at our home planet.
A stretch of Milky Way
Monday, December 2, 2024: Between these two blocky buildings, the arm of our Milky Way stretches into the night sky. This photo was taken from European Southern Observatory’s (ESO’s) Very Large Telescope (VLT), high in the Chilean mountains. Pictured, the VLT’s fourth Unit Telescope, stands like two pillars guiding the galaxy’s arm.
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