"Brace Yourselves, Moon Pulls a Crabby 'C' as it Skedaddles from Gemini to Cancer - Expect Extra Cheese With Your Lunar Pie!"
NASA astronaut and Expedition 68 Flight Engineer Stephen Bowen holds a small pie that is festively decorated in commemoration of Pi Day aboard the International Space Station.
Image Credit: NASA/Warren Hoburg
"Moony Makes a Mad Dash: Lunar Unit R2-D2 Reports Relocation from Taurus to Gemini, Promises Galactic Gossip!"
Immediately after splashdown, a recovery helicopter from the USS Guadalcanal hovers over the Apollo 9 spacecraft. Still inside the Command Module are astronauts James A. McDivitt, David R. Scott, and Russell L. Schweickart. Splashdown occurred at 12:00:53 p.m. EST March 13, 1969, only 4.5 nautical miles from the USS Guadalcanal, the prime recovery ship, to conclude a successful 10-day Earth-orbital mission in space.
Image Credit: NASA
Expedition 70 Flight Engineers (from left) Jasmin Moghbeli and Loral O'Hara, both NASA astronauts, are pictured inside the International Space Station's cupola holding NASA's first graphic novel, "First Woman."
Image Credit: NASA/Loral O'Hara
"Brace Yourselves, Space Nuggets! The Moon's Ditching Hot-Headed Aries for Chillaxed Taurus - Expect Cosmic Cows Jumping Over Lunar Rainbows!"
The Moon is seen passing in front of the Sun at the point of the maximum of the partial solar eclipse near Banner, Wyoming on Monday, Aug. 21, 2017. A total solar eclipse swept across a narrow portion of the contiguous United States from Lincoln Beach, Oregon to Charleston, South Carolina. A partial solar eclipse was visible across the entire North American continent along with parts of South America, Africa, and Europe.
Image Credit: NASA/Joel Kowsky
"Venus Ditches Aquarius's Futuristic Condo for Pisces's Beachfront Bungalow: 'Beaming Up' Takes on a Whole New Meaning!"
"Brace Yourselves, Moon's Swapping its Fishy Pajamas for Fiery Ram Onesies: Pisces to Aries Transit Incoming!"
"Mercury Makes a Splashy Exit from Pisces, Charges into Aries like it's Late for a Comic-Con Panel!"
This image shows two types of sand dunes on Mars. The small dots are called barchan dunes, and from their shape we can tell that they are upwind. The downwind dunes are long and linear. These two types of dune each show the wind direction in different ways: the barchans have a steep slope and crescent-shaped "horns" that point downwind, while the linear dunes are stretched out along the primary wind direction. Linear dunes, however, typically indicate a wind regime with at least two different prevailing winds, which stretch out the sand along their average direction. In several places in this image, you can find barchan dunes turning into linear dunes as they are stretched out, but they both seem into indicate the same wind direction.
Image Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech/University of Arizona
Excellent view of the docked Apollo 9 command and service modules (CSM) and lunar module (LM), with Earth in the background, during astronaut David R. Scott's stand-up spacewalk, on the fourth day of the Apollo 9 Earth-orbital mission. Scott, command module pilot, is standing in the open hatch of the command module. Astronaut Russell L. Schweickart, lunar module pilot, took this photograph of Scott from the porch of the LM. Inside the LM was astronaut James A. McDivitt, Apollo 9 commander.
Image Credit: NASA/Russell L. Schweickart
"Brace Yourselves, The Moon is Pulling a Neo: Ditching the Corporate Capricorn for a Wild Dive into the Aquarian Matrix!"
In honor of Women’s History Month 2024 and those who paved the way for them, hundreds of female staff – from artists to administrative support, educators to engineers, and scientists to safety officers – gathered in front of the Katherine G. Johnson Computational Research Facility at NASA’s Langley Research Center in Hampton, Virginia, on Feb. 6, 2024.
Image Credit: NASA/David C. Bowman
"Much Ado About Moonwalking: Lunar Lunacy Leaps from Sagittarius to Capricorn - This Isn't Alien Abduction, Folks!"