Last Launch by Dan Winters
Via guillher
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Cosas con las que me encuentro
Last Launch by Dan Winters
Via guillher
Saturn (via NASA/JPL)
(Top) Saturn and two of its moons, Tethys (above) and Dione, were photographed by Voyager 1 on November 3, 1980, from 13 million kilometers (8 million miles).
(Bottom) Titan, Saturn’s largest moon, measures 3,200 miles, or 5,150 kilometers, across and is larger than the planet Mercury.
(Source: bluedogeyes)
NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratories recruitment ads (via fdecomite)
Ads from late 60’s Scientific American.
(Source: bluedogeyes)
Opportunity & Curiosity by Dan Brennan
(Source: bluedogeyes)
(Saturn, part of the NASA Cassini Probe Mission)
(via throughascientificlens)
Solar Loops
Image courtesy: SDO/NASA
Huge loops of plasma—superheated, charged gas—rise from an active region on the sun in a newly released picture from NASA’s Solar Dynamics Observatory. Each loop is as tall as several Earths stacked on top of each other.
Prehistoric Astronaut by Kristin Frenzel
Prints available at etsy and society6. Like a ceratopsid being shot into space.. Boom! Space Ceratopsid!
Artist: deviantart / website / twitter

50 Years of Space Exploration
Originally a fold-out from a 2009 nationalgeographic, this amazingly detailed graph depicts the various ventures out into the unknown undertaken by man and satellite alike. Conveyed in colorful and sweeping orbital pathways, you can view the full celestial masterpiece with annotations (though somewhat blurred) right here.
(via: reddit)