A sunrise in space is something special. I like how it goes from very quiet with beautiful colours to what looks like a nuclear explosion (which is pretty much what happens in the Sun). That "nuclear explosion" is what brings life and energy to all our planet and also provides for all of our electricity up here! On Wednesday Shane and I are heading outside to install new solar panels to get even more energy from our star. The spacesuit comes with built in shades , looking at this series you can imagine why they are so important! We don't need to bring sun cream though, the white spacesuit takes care of that đ
Lever de Soleil sur la Terre. Les couleurs se rĂ©chauffent dâabord doucement, puis c'est le grand Ă©clat - un spectacle Ă la hauteur de la rĂ©action nuclĂ©aire explosive Ă lâĆuvre dans le â , dont lâĂ©nergie libĂ©rĂ©e rend la vie et les activitĂ©s possibles sur la planĂšte... et sur la Station ! Elle fonctionne Ă 100% Ă lâĂ©nergie solaire, grĂące Ă un dispositif de six Ă©normes panneaux quâon doit dĂ©sormais mettre Ă niveau. Câest justement pour ça que Shane et moi allons sortir dans le vide de lâespace aprĂšs-demain : on installera un nouveau panneau (et on recommencera lâopĂ©ration dimanche avec un deuxiĂšme). Notre casque de scaphandre est Ă©quipĂ© dâune visiĂšre pour nous protĂ©ger des UV et autres rayonnements, forcĂ©ment dâautant plus dangereux loin de la protection de lâatmosphĂšre ! Dâailleurs, mĂȘme dans la Station, si on passe un peu trop de temps derriĂšre les 9 hublots de la Cupola pendant un survol de jour (bonjour la rĂ©verbĂ©ration), on risque bel et bien un coup de soleil spatial⊠đ
Credits: ESA/NASAâT. Pesquet
439B6686_cr_cr
Tags: sunrise sun clouds atmosphere
© All Rights Reserved
La saison des aurores australes est de retour ! Ou plutĂŽt, notre orbite et le vent solaire nous ont permis dâen observer Ă nouveau, personne ne va sâen plaindre đ Un dĂ©tail quand mĂȘme : le Soyouz qui photobombe les images nâest plus celui dâOleg : câest le vaisseau dâAnton :)
Aurora season is back! Our orbits and the solar wind have made the aurora visible again. No one is complaining! đ One thing has changed... the Soyuz in the foreground is now Anton's, and no longer Oleg's :)
Credits: ESA/NASAâT. Pesquet
439F1084
Tags: aurora soyuz progress
© All Rights Reserved
Votre livraison quotidienne d'aurore australe est arrivée !
.
An Aurora a day... keeps the boredom away? đđ
Credits: ESA/NASAâT. Pesquet
549F9542
Tags: aurora Spacecraft TPF1
© All Rights Reserved
Votre livraison quotidienne d'aurore australe est arrivée !
.
An Aurora a day... keeps the boredom away? đđ
Credits: ESA/NASAâT. Pesquet
608D3548bis
Tags: aurora Spacecraft TPF1
© All Rights Reserved
Allez ça faisait un moment, mais on ne se lasse pas du spectacle : une couche đŽ sâinvite parfois au-dessus des flammĂšches des aurores australes, comme pour complĂ©ter le tableau (et le đ”, ce sont les prĂ©mices dâun lever de soleil)
Red, green and blue in this aurora picture. The green is the standard aurora colour, but of course nothing is ever standard about these magnificent shows of nature! Aurora turn red at higher altitudes as the solar winds excite atomic atoms to give off different light. It is effectively the same principle as how we create different colour neon lights. Shoutout to Don Pettit who basically invented space photography and took the time to write down tons of useful information like this to pass on to subsequent crews. The blue is from an impending sunrise on the horizon. When the sun comes, the aurora goes away, or at least is not visible anymore!
Credits: ESA/NASAâT. Pesquet
439D2865
Tags: aurora TPF1
© All Rights Reserved