Re : Le grand thread de l'Espace
Ni le Sri Lanka.
Vous n’êtes pas identifié. Veuillez vous connecter ou vous inscrire.
Le Vrai Asile » Culture & médias » Le grand thread de l'Espace
Pages Précédent 1 … 20 21 22 23 24 … 107 Suivant
Vous devez vous connecter ou vous inscrire pour pouvoir répondre
Ni le Sri Lanka.
ouais ?
ouais ?
clique pec
D'la poudre d'mars mec !
je suis surement très con mais comment fait curiosity pour s'auto photographier sans qu'on voit son bras ? C'est Stanley qui l'a faite ?
Comme les google car.
ok c'est bon je l'ai.
spadanlespace abruti.
[video]http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=pl … KXLWuraQ#![/video]
Une vidéo de Mercure faites à partir des clichés pris par la sonde Messenger.
[video]http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=pl … oDcjs6q4c8[/video]
Ca me fait penser au daily show la dessus, à partir de 6:10
Haha putain, c'est vraiment cela que l'on appelle l'âme russe
Cosmonaut Valeriy V. Polyakov, who boarded Russia's Mir space station on January 8, 1994, observes rendezvous operations with the Space Shuttle Discovery on its STS-63 mission through a window on the Mir Core Module on February 6, 1995. Polyakov's second spaceflight, the longest human spaceflight in history, began on January 8, 1994 with the launch of the Soyuz TM-18 mission. He spent approximately 437 days (most of that time alone) aboard Mir conducting experiments and performing scientific research. During this flight, he completed just over 7,000 orbits of the Earth. On January 9, 1995, after 366 days in space, Polyakov formally broke the spaceflight duration record previously set by Vladimir Titov and Musa Manarov six years earlier. He returned to Earth aboard Soyuz TM-20 on March 22, 1995. Upon landing, Polyakov opted not to be carried the few feet between the Soyuz capsule and a nearby lawn chair, instead walking the short distance. In doing so, he wished to prove that humans could be physically capable of working on the surface of Mars after a long-duration transit phase. Polyakov volunteered for his 437 day flight to learn how the human body would respond to the micro-gravity environment on long-duration missions to Mars.
View of the crescent moon through the top of the earth's atmosphere. Photographed from International Space Station by Expedition 13 crew over the South China Sea, just south of Macau.
"Earthrise" is the name given to a photograph of the Earth that was taken by Apollo 8 crewmember Bill Anders on December 24, 1968, showing the Earth seemingly rising above the lunar surface. Note that this phenomenon is only visible from someone in orbit around the Moon. Because of the Moon's synchronous rotation about the Earth (i.e., the same side of the Moon is always facing the Earth), no Earthrise can be observed by a stationary observer on the surface of the Moon.
A satellite picture of the Dasht-e Kavir desert in Iran. October 2000.
À propos des Russes qui passaient pas mal de temps dans Mir, il y a aussi ceux qui sont partis au moment de l'URSS et qui sont redescendus après que ça soit devenu la Fédération de Russie.
Après que c'est devenu, même.
[video]http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=pl … af2du-XM#![/video]
The alarmingly tall inhabitants of this small, snowy planet cast long shadows in bright moonlight. Of course, the snowy planet is actually planet Earth and the wide-angle mosaic, shown as a little planet projection, was recorded on February 25 during the long northern night of the Full Snow Moon. The second brightest celestial beacon is Jupiter, on the right above the little planet's horizon. Lights near Östersund, Sweden glow along the horizon, surrounding the snow covered lake Storsjön. The photographer reports that the journey out onto the frozen lake by sled to capture the evocative Full Snow Moon scene was accompanied by ice sounds, biting cold, and a moonlit mist.
Pages Précédent 1 … 20 21 22 23 24 … 107 Suivant
Vous devez vous connecter ou vous inscrire pour pouvoir répondre
Le Vrai Asile » Culture & médias » Le grand thread de l'Espace
Propulsé par PunBB, supporté par Informer Technologies, Inc.
Généré en 0,146 secondes, 48 requêtes exécutées