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Lundi, 18 Juillet 2011 18:00

Astronaut Captures Fantastic Shot of Aurora From Space

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Astronaut Captures Fantastic Shot of Aurora From Space

A crew member floating inside the International Space Station snapped this long-exposure photo of the southern lights dancing through Earth’s atmosphere on July 16.

Such light shows occur when high-energy solar particles corralled by Earth’s magnetic field slam into atmospheric gas near the planet’s poles (in this case, somewhere over Antarctica).

At left is part of the space station’s solar arrays, and at center is space shuttle Atlantis’ robotic arm and inspection boom, which is backlit by the moon. One of Atlantis‘ wings, orbital maneuvering system pods and payload bay doors is seen at right.

The four-person crew of Atlantis recently piled in and closed the airlock between their spaceship and the space station in preparation for the last-ever shuttle undocking maneuver tomorrow at 2:28 a.m. EDT.

NASA expects the astronauts to return to Kennedy Space Center on Thursday, July 21 at 5:57 a.m. EDT.

Image: NASA [high-resolution version available]

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Astronaut Captures Fantastic Shot of Aurora From SpaceDave is a Wired Science contributor and freelance science journalist who's obsessed with space, physics, biology, technology and more. He lives in New York City.
Follow @davemosher and @wiredscience on Twitter.

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