| Piú viste |

Rho_Ophiuci~0.jpgRho Ophiuci59 visite"...Gratias tibi maximas, Catullus,
Agit pessimus omnium Poeta,
Tanto pessimus omnium Poeta
Quanto tu optimus omnium patronum..."
(Catullo)
"...Catullus gives you warmest thanks,
And he, the worst of Poets ranks;
As much the worst of bards confessed,
As you of advocates the best..."
(trasl. by William Marris)MareKromium
|
|

Titan-N00143762-N00143780.gifOverlap (GIF-Movie; credits: Dr G. Barca)59 visitenessun commentoMareKromium
|
|

Enceladus-N00143622-N00143643.gifFountains of Light and possible UFO (GIF-Movie; credits: Dr G. Barca)59 visiteDalla (sconfinata) Pazienza del nostro Grande Amico e Partner, Dr Gianluigi Barca, un GIF-Movie davvero bellissimo, affascinante ed intrigante.
Una scatola di cioccolatini (virtuali) al primo Lettore capace di identificare l'oggetto che sfreccia davanti alle telecamere di CASSINI mentre la "Palla di Neve" - Enceladus - continua ad eiettare ghiaccio nello Spazio circum-Saturniano!MareKromium
|
|

Dione_Tethys-N00144184-N00144203-N00144746-N00144765.gifNight Passengers (GIF-Movie; credits: Dr G. Barca)59 visitenessun commentoMareKromium
|
|

SOL079-GB-LXT-00.jpgOn the Edge of Bonneville Crater - Sol 79 (Absolute Natural Colors; credits for the additional process. and color.: Dr G. Barca)59 visitenessun commentoMareKromium
|
|

Titan-Seas-Kraken_Mare-PIA11626-00.jpgKraken Mare (Natural Colors; credits: Lunexit)59 visiteCaption NASA:"In the top right of this Cassini image, the Southern end of Titan's huge lake of liquid hydrocarbons called Kraken Mare is visible near the moon's North Pole.
See PIA11146 to learn more about Titan's lake districts and to see a map.
Near the moon's Equator are the albedo features Senkyo on the right and Aztlan on the left. This view looks toward the Saturn-Facing Side of Titan. North is up and rotated 31° to the right.
The image was taken with the Cassini Spacecraft wide-angle camera on Oct. 12, 2009 using a spectral filter sensitive to wavelengths of Near-InfraRed Light centered at 939 nanometers.
The view was acquired at a distance of approx. 252.000 Km (about 157.000 miles) from Titan and at a Sun-Titan-Spacecraft, or Phase, Angle of 11°.
Image scale is roughly 15 Km (a little more than 9 miles) per pixel".MareKromium
|
|

Meteor_Strike.jpgBetween Cosmic Clouds... (by Victor van Wulfen)59 visitenessun commentoMareKromium
|
|

Titan-N00141759_to_N00141771_RAWC-SD.jpgTitan (Superdefinition and Enhanced Natural Colors; credits for the additional process. and color.: Dr M. Faccin - Lunexit Team)59 visitenessun commentoMareKromium
|
|

Earth.pngMother Earth59 visiteDalla Rubrica "NASA - Picture of the Day", del giorno 23 Novembre 2009:"Goodbye Earth!
Earlier this month, ESA's interplanetary Rosetta Spacecraft zoomed past the Earth on its way back across the Solar System.
Pictured above, Earth showed a bright crescent phase featuring the South Pole to the passing rocket ship. Launched from Earth in 2004, Rosetta used the gravity of the Earth to help propel it out past Mars and toward a 2014 rendezvous with Comet Churyumov-Gerasimenko.
Last year, the Robot Spacecraft passed asteroid 2867 Steins, and next year it is scheduled to pass enigmatic asteroid 21 Lutetia. If all goes well, Rosetta will release a probe that will land on the 15-Km diameter comet in 2014". MareKromium
|
|

ESP_014441_1275_RED_abrowse.jpgHellespontus' Dunefield (Natural Colors; credits: Lunexit)59 visitenessun commentoMareKromium
|
|

ESP_014342_0930-10.jpgSouth Polar Residual Cap Intraseasonal Change Monitoring (EDM n.10 - Natural Colors; credits: Lunexit)59 visitenessun commentoMareKromium
|
|

LavaFlows-ArsiaMons-20091127a.jpgLava Flows (False Colors; credits: Lunexit)59 visitenessun commentoMareKromium
|
|
| 25353 immagini su 2113 pagina(e) |
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
1309 |  |
 |
 |
 |
|