![THE TEN BEST IMAGES TAKEN FROM THE INTERNATIONAL SPACE STATION](https://cdn.magzter.com/1493279487/1718115828/articles/TZ-di1tZ91719989219909/THE-TEN-BEST-IMAGES-TAKEN-FROM-THE-INTERNATIONAL-SPACE-STATION.jpg)
JUST STEPPED OUT FOR A WALK
Astronauts train for many years for the chance to go to space, with no guarantee of actually flying, so being given a place on a mission to live on the International Space Station (ISS) for a few months is a dream come true. But some astronauts get to do even more – they wriggle into a spacesuit and go outside on an extravehicular activity (EVA), or spacewalk. This image, taken on 23 May 2017 during the 201st spacewalk of the ISS program, shows NASA astronaut Jack Fischer waving at his colleagues watching from inside the space station as he worked outside the US Destiny laboratory. Fischer was attaching antennae to the exterior of the ISS during an unplanned EVA to repair and replace a failed computer data relay box. Luckily, there was no malfunctioning computer to refuse to let him back inside…
A SKY FULL OF STARS
Whenever NASA posts an image on social media showing a beautiful view from the ISS, within minutes conspiracy theorists are declaring it’s a fake. One of their favourite comments is “Where are the stars? The sky should be full of stars!” This comes down to a lack of understanding of basic photography. The vast majority of images taken from the ISS are taken when it’s in daylight, and show Earth, or the ISS structure itself, brightly lit by the Sun. The exposures are far too short – fractions of a second – to record the faint stars in the sky. Exposures long enough to show the stars would burn out Earth and the ISS. But the astronauts aboard the ISS have magnificent views of the stars after sunset, and they do occasionally post images showing that view. This one, taken on 9 August 2015 by a member of the Expedition 44 crew, shows the star clouds of the Milky Way and dark lanes of dust across them.
SHUTTLE ORBITER FLY AROUND
Esta historia es de la edición Issue 157 de All About Space UK.
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Esta historia es de la edición Issue 157 de All About Space UK.
Comience su prueba gratuita de Magzter GOLD de 7 días para acceder a miles de historias premium seleccionadas y a más de 9,000 revistas y periódicos.
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LONG AGO, A LAKE ON MARS MAY HAVE BEEN SPRAWLING WITH MICROBES
Curiosity discovered manganese oxide in bedrock in a Martian region that may have been a shoreline billions of years ago
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MOON TOUR HELL
Finding this fascinating crater isnt as hard as its name suggests...
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THIS MONTH'S PLANETS
Most of the planets are tricky targets this month, but our guide will help you locate them
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UNIVERSE BEFORE TIME
Could the existence of a mirror-image cosmos before the Big Bang solve some of the biggest mysteries in astronomy?
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CLIMATE CHANGE IN THE SOLAR SYSTEM
Alongside Earth, our planetary neighbourhood is changing, but it’s not for the better…
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Stars give tiny planets a gravitational 'squeeze' to strip away their atmospheres
A scientist has learned more about the violent processes that rip atmospheres away from planets, finding that squashing and squeezing by a parent star can contribute to this process.
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The Milky Way's halo is filled with ‘magnetic doughnuts' as wide as 100,000 light years
The outer halo of the Milky Way is filled with magnetic fields that take the shape of vast doughnuts with diameters ranging from 12,000 to 100,000 light years, with the heart of our galaxy at their centre.
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The Pentagon wants the commercial space reserve to support military satellites in orbit
The US Department of Defense is developing a plan to use the ever-growing American commercial space industry for national security purposes.
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DOES A COSMIC 'GLITCH' IN GRAVITY CHALLENGE ALBERT EINSTEIN'S GREATEST THEORY?
Gravity changes once you reach a cosmic scale
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DEEP SKY CHALLENGE : STELLAR TREASURES OF THE ARCHER AND SCORPION
Summer skies are stuffed full of amazing objects for your telescope - if you're prepared to stay up late