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Space Exploration Collection (page 11)

"Embarking on a celestial journey, space exploration unveils the mysteries of the universe

Background imageSpace Exploration Collection: Lander and surface of Mars, Viking 1 Mission to Mars, 1976. Creator: NASA

Lander and surface of Mars, Viking 1 Mission to Mars, 1976. Creator: NASA
Lander and surface of Mars, Viking 1 Mission to Mars, 1976. The Viking 1 spacecraft, part of NASAs Viking programme, was the first spacecraft to land successfully on Mars and perform its mission

Background imageSpace Exploration Collection: Sample scoop and arm, Viking 1 Mission to Mars, 1976. Creator: NASA

Sample scoop and arm, Viking 1 Mission to Mars, 1976. Creator: NASA
Sample scoop and arm, Viking 1 Mission to Mars, 1976. The Viking 1 spacecraft, part of NASAs Viking programme, was the first spacecraft to land successfully on Mars and perform its mission

Background imageSpace Exploration Collection: First colour photograph of the Martian planet surface, Viking 1 Mission to Mars, 1976

First colour photograph of the Martian planet surface, Viking 1 Mission to Mars, 1976. The Viking 1 spacecraft, part of NASAs Viking programme

Background imageSpace Exploration Collection: Martian sunset, Viking 1 Mission to Mars, 1976. Creator: NASA

Martian sunset, Viking 1 Mission to Mars, 1976. Creator: NASA
Martian sunset, Viking 1 Mission to Mars, 1976. Mars skyline at sunset, pictured from the Viking lander. The Viking 1 spacecraft, part of NASAs Viking programme

Background imageSpace Exploration Collection: Spiral galaxy in Triangulum constellation. Creator: NASA

Spiral galaxy in Triangulum constellation. Creator: NASA
Spiral galaxy in Triangulum constellation

Background imageSpace Exploration Collection: The Planet Mars. Creator: NASA

The Planet Mars. Creator: NASA
The Planet Mars

Background imageSpace Exploration Collection: Artists impression of disc star in constellation Cygnus. Creator: NASA

Artists impression of disc star in constellation Cygnus. Creator: NASA
Artists impression of disc star in constellation Cygnus. The Cygnus constellation derives its name from the Latinised Greek word for swan

Background imageSpace Exploration Collection: Missing solar array on Skylab 2, 1973. Creator: NASA

Missing solar array on Skylab 2, 1973. Creator: NASA
Missing solar array on Skylab 2, 1973. In the first repair spacewalk, Commander Pete Conrad and medical officer Joseph Kerwin managed to restore functionality to a solar wing

Background imageSpace Exploration Collection: Open star cluster, the Pleiades in Taurus. Creator: NASA

Open star cluster, the Pleiades in Taurus. Creator: NASA
Open star cluster, the Pleiades in Taurus. The Pleiades (also known as the Seven Sisters and Messier 45), are an open star cluster in the constellation of Taurus

Background imageSpace Exploration Collection: Atlas-Centaur rocket lifting off, Cape Canaveral Air Force Station, Florida, USA

Atlas-Centaur rocket lifting off, Cape Canaveral Air Force Station, Florida, USA
Atlas-Centaur rocket lifting off from Launch Complex 36 at the Cape Canaveral Air Force Station, Florida, USA. Atlas-Centaur was a series of expendable launch vehicles (or ELVs)

Background imageSpace Exploration Collection: Centre of the Andromeda Galaxy. Creator: NASA

Centre of the Andromeda Galaxy. Creator: NASA
Centre of the Andromeda Galaxy. Andromeda is a spiral galaxy approximately 780 kiloparsecs (2.5 million light-years) from Earth, and is the nearest major galaxy to our own Milky Way Galaxy

Background imageSpace Exploration Collection: Saturn V rocket lifting off, Kennedy Space Center, Merritt Island, Florida, USA. Creator: NASA

Saturn V rocket lifting off, Kennedy Space Center, Merritt Island, Florida, USA. Creator: NASA
Saturn V rocket lifting off, Kennedy Space Center, Merritt Island, Florida, USA. The Saturn V was the largest rocket ever built and was used on all Apollo missions to the moon

Background imageSpace Exploration Collection: Apollo space walk. Creator: NASA

Apollo space walk. Creator: NASA
Apollo space walk. Astronaut performing a spacewalk (or EVA, Extra Vehicular Activity) outside a spacecraft

Background imageSpace Exploration Collection: Shuttle in Vehicle Assembly Building, second Space Shuttle flight, 1981. Creator: NASA

Shuttle in Vehicle Assembly Building, second Space Shuttle flight, 1981. Creator: NASA
Shuttle in Vehicle Assembly Building, second Space Shuttle flight, 1981. The Space Shuttle being prepared in the Kennedy Space Center, Merritt Island, Florida, USA

Background imageSpace Exploration Collection: Orbiter flight tests, Space Shuttle Enterprise landing, USA, c1975. Creator: NASA

Orbiter flight tests, Space Shuttle Enterprise landing, USA, c1975. Creator: NASA
Orbiter flight tests, Space Shuttle Enterprise landing, USA, c1975. The Enterprise (OV-101) was built as part of NASAs Space Shuttle programme to perform atmospheric test flights after being launched

Background imageSpace Exploration Collection: First Space Shuttle flight, Columbia parting from carrier aircraft, April 1981

First Space Shuttle flight, Columbia parting from carrier aircraft, April 1981. The moment of parting from the Boeing 747 carrier. The Columbia Orbiter operated between 1981 and 2003

Background imageSpace Exploration Collection: Eugene Cernan using the Rover on the lunar surface, Apollo 17 mission, December 1972

Eugene Cernan using the Rover on the lunar surface, Apollo 17 mission, December 1972. US astronauts Eugene Cernan and Harrison Schmitt collected samples

Background imageSpace Exploration Collection: Astronaut with Lunar Roving Vehicle on the Moon, 1970s. Creator: NASA

Astronaut with Lunar Roving Vehicle on the Moon, 1970s. Creator: NASA
Astronaut with Lunar Roving Vehicle on the Moon, 1970s. The LRV or Moon Buggy was a battery-powered four-wheeled rover used on the Moon in the last three missions of the American Apollo programme in

Background imageSpace Exploration Collection: Astronaut Charles Duke at the Descartes landing site, Apollo 16 mission, April 1972

Astronaut Charles Duke at the Descartes landing site, Apollo 16 mission, April 1972. Charles Duke collecting lunar samples on the surface of the Moon, with the Lunar Roving Vehicle

Background imageSpace Exploration Collection: Lunar Module above the Moon, Apollo 16 mission, April 1972. Creator: Thomas Mattingly

Lunar Module above the Moon, Apollo 16 mission, April 1972. Creator: Thomas Mattingly
Lunar Module above the Moon, Apollo 16 mission, April 1972. Lunar landing craft photographed from the Command Module. The three primary objectives of the mission were: to inspect, survey

Background imageSpace Exploration Collection: Skylab Space Station cluster seen from Command Module 3, 1973. Creator: NASA

Skylab Space Station cluster seen from Command Module 3, 1973. Creator: NASA
Skylab Space Station cluster seen from Command Module 3, 1973. The Skylab space station first launched in May 1973, and was occupied in succession by three teams of three crewmembers

Background imageSpace Exploration Collection: Last view of Skylab, 1974. Creator: NASA

Last view of Skylab, 1974. Creator: NASA
Last view of Skylab, 1974. The Skylab space station first launched in May 1973, and was occupied in succession by three teams of three crewmembers

Background imageSpace Exploration Collection: Lift off, second Space Shuttle flight, Kennedy Space Center, Merritt Island, Florida, USA, 1981

Lift off, second Space Shuttle flight, Kennedy Space Center, Merritt Island, Florida, USA, 1981
Lift off, second Space Shuttle flight, Kennedy Space Center, Merritt Island, Florida, USA, November 1981. STS-2 was the second Space Shuttle mission conducted by NASA

Background imageSpace Exploration Collection: Space Shuttle Orbiter Discovery landing at Kennedy Space Center, Florida, USA, 1980s

Space Shuttle Orbiter Discovery landing at Kennedy Space Center, Florida, USA, 1980s
Space Shuttle Orbiter Discovery landing at Kennedy Space Center, Merritt Island, Florida, USA, 1980s. Discovery was in operation between 1984 and 2011

Background imageSpace Exploration Collection: Saturn and its moon Dione, seen from the Voyager 2 spacecraft. Creator: NASA

Saturn and its moon Dione, seen from the Voyager 2 spacecraft. Creator: NASA
Saturn and its moon Dione, seen from the Voyager 2 spacecraft

Background imageSpace Exploration Collection: Saturns rings, range 717, 000 km, seen from Voyager 1 spacecraft. Creator: NASA

Saturns rings, range 717, 000 km, seen from Voyager 1 spacecraft. Creator: NASA
Saturns rings, range 717, 000 km, seen from Voyager 1 spacecraft

Background imageSpace Exploration Collection: Solar prominences. Creator: NASA

Solar prominences. Creator: NASA
Solar prominences. A prominence is a large, bright, gaseous feature extending outward from the Suns surface, often in a loop shape

Background imageSpace Exploration Collection: The Suns corona. Creator: NASA

The Suns corona. Creator: NASA
The Suns corona. The Suns corona, an aura of plasma, extends millions of kilometres into outer space, and is most easily seen during a total solar eclipse

Background imageSpace Exploration Collection: Neptune from Voyager 2 spacecraft, c1980s. Creator: NASA

Neptune from Voyager 2 spacecraft, c1980s. Creator: NASA
Neptune from Voyager 2 spacecraft, c1980s. The Voyager 2 space probe was launched by NASA in August 1977. The purpose of the Voyager programme was to study the outer Solar System

Background imageSpace Exploration Collection: The surface of the Moon. Creator: NASA

The surface of the Moon. Creator: NASA
The surface of the Moon

Background imageSpace Exploration Collection: Europa from Voyager 2, 9 July 1979. Creator: NASA

Europa from Voyager 2, 9 July 1979. Creator: NASA
Europa from Voyager 2, 9 July 1979. Europa, one of Jupiters moons, seen from the unmanned Voyager 2 spacecraft. The size of our moon

Background imageSpace Exploration Collection: Milky Way in the Sagittarius region with meteor streak. Creator: NASA

Milky Way in the Sagittarius region with meteor streak. Creator: NASA
Milky Way in the Sagittarius region with meteor streak. The trail of a meteor is seen against the Milky Way galaxy that contains our Solar System. It is part of the Sagittarius constellation

Background imageSpace Exploration Collection: Clouds in the upper atmosphere of Uranus, from Voyager 2, c1986. Creator: NASA

Clouds in the upper atmosphere of Uranus, from Voyager 2, c1986. Creator: NASA
Clouds in the upper atmosphere of Uranus, from Voyager 2, c1986. Clouds in the upper atmosphere of the planet Uranus, photographed by NASAs Voyager 2 spacecraft

Background imageSpace Exploration Collection: Uranus from Voyager 2 spacecraft, c1980s. Creator: NASA

Uranus from Voyager 2 spacecraft, c1980s. Creator: NASA
Uranus from Voyager 2 spacecraft, c1980s. Two images - one in true and one in false colour. The unmanned Voyager 2 space probe was launched by NASA in August 1977

Background imageSpace Exploration Collection: The Needle Galaxy in Coma Berenices. Creator: NASA

The Needle Galaxy in Coma Berenices. Creator: NASA
The Needle Galaxy in Coma Berenices. The Needle Galaxy, an edge-on spiral galaxy in the constellation of Coma Berenices

Background imageSpace Exploration Collection: Aries and the Seven Sisters. Creator: NASA

Aries and the Seven Sisters. Creator: NASA
Aries and the Seven Sisters. The constellation of Aries and the Pleiades (or Seven Sisters) star cluster. Aries (Latin for ram) is one of the constellations of the zodiac

Background imageSpace Exploration Collection: Uranus with satellites Miranda, Ariel and Umbriel, from Voyager 2, 24 January 1986

Uranus with satellites Miranda, Ariel and Umbriel, from Voyager 2, 24 January 1986. Composite of images taken by the unmanned Voyager 2 spacecraft from 74 million kilometres (46 million miles) away

Background imageSpace Exploration Collection: Bright cluster of stars. Creator: NASA

Bright cluster of stars. Creator: NASA
Bright cluster of stars

Background imageSpace Exploration Collection: Conrad in shower facility aboard Skylab 2, 1973. Creator: NASA

Conrad in shower facility aboard Skylab 2, 1973. Creator: NASA
Conrad in shower facility aboard Skylab 2, 1973. Skylab 2 commander Pete Conrad takes a shower in zero gravity. The Skylab space station, first launched in May 1973

Background imageSpace Exploration Collection: Launch Control Center in the John F Kennedy Space Center, Florida, USA, July 1969

Launch Control Center in the John F Kennedy Space Center, Florida, USA, July 1969
Launch Control Center in the John F Kennedy Space Center, Merritt Island, Florida, USA, July 1969. Apollo 11 was launched by a Saturn V rocket from Kennedy Space Center on 16 July 1969

Background imageSpace Exploration Collection: Fog -filled craters, Mars. Creator: NASA

Fog -filled craters, Mars. Creator: NASA
Fog -filled craters, Mars. Surface of the planet Mars

Background imageSpace Exploration Collection: Trench excavated by surface sampler, Viking 1 Mission to Mars, 1976. Creator: NASA

Trench excavated by surface sampler, Viking 1 Mission to Mars, 1976. Creator: NASA
Trench excavated by surface sampler, Viking 1 Mission to Mars, 1976. The Viking 1 spacecraft, part of NASAs Viking programme

Background imageSpace Exploration Collection: Launch of Gemini-Titan 2, Cape Kennedy Air Force Station, Florida, USA, 19 January 1965

Launch of Gemini-Titan 2, Cape Kennedy Air Force Station, Florida, USA, 19 January 1965. Gemini-Titan 2 (or GT-2) was the second spaceflight of NASAs Project Gemini

Background imageSpace Exploration Collection: Io, Jupiters moon, from 304, 000 miles. Creator: NASA

Io, Jupiters moon, from 304, 000 miles. Creator: NASA
Io, Jupiters moon, from 304, 000 miles. Io, which has over 400 active volcanoes, is the most geologically active object in the Solar System

Background imageSpace Exploration Collection: Halleys Comet, 8 May 1910. Creator: George Willis Ritchey

Halleys Comet, 8 May 1910. Creator: George Willis Ritchey
Halleys Comet, 8 May 1910. The head of Halleys Comet as photographed by Dr George Willis Ritchey using the 60-inch (1.5-meter) telescope at Mount Wilson Observatory, California, USA

Background imageSpace Exploration Collection: Earth from the Moon. Creator: NASA

Earth from the Moon. Creator: NASA
Earth from the Moon

Background imageSpace Exploration Collection: Earth from Apollo 16, April 1972. Creator: NASA

Earth from Apollo 16, April 1972. Creator: NASA
Earth from Apollo 16, April 1972

Background imageSpace Exploration Collection: Baja California seen from aboard the second Space Shuttle flight, November 1981. Creator: NASA

Baja California seen from aboard the second Space Shuttle flight, November 1981. Creator: NASA
Baja California seen from aboard the second Space Shuttle flight, November 1981. The Baja California Peninsula, a state in western Mexico, which protrudes into the Pacific Ocean



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"Embarking on a celestial journey, space exploration unveils the mysteries of the universe. 🚀✨ With astronomy as our guide, we strive to find balance between Earth and the vastness beyond. The drama unfolds as we witness eternal wonders that defy comprehension. From everlasting galaxies like the majestic Sombrero Galaxy to gaseous pillars captured by Hubble Space Telescope, each discovery leaves us in awe. In 1969, APOLLO 11 marked a historic moment when Buzz Aldrin stood on the moon's surface, reflecting Neil Armstrong and Eagle in his visor—a testament to human achievement. The diagram of Ariane 5 rocket showcases our relentless pursuit of reaching new heights while maintaining meticulous engineering precision. The Curiosity rover roams Mars' desolate terrain with an artistic touch, capturing its surroundings through stunning artwork. Meanwhile, Saturn 5 stands mid-air—an illustration of American ingenuity propelling us towards unimaginable frontiers. As NASA's space shuttles launch into orbit with thunderous power, they carry dreams and aspirations for mankind's future among the stars. Skylab gracefully orbits above Earth at the end of its mission—reminding us that even in space, time moves forward. Cassini spacecraft explores Saturn and Titan from close quarters—a daring endeavor expanding our knowledge about distant worlds. Gemini 7 glides effortlessly through Earth's orbit—a symbol of humanity's quest for understanding beyond our own planet. A gateway to eternity—an endless voyage where every step brings us closer to unraveling cosmic enigmas. It beckons us to embrace both the known and unknown—the globe itself becoming smaller as we venture further into uncharted territories. " (Note.