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"Hiya, Pal!"

Mickey Mouse greeted the astronauts and cosmonauts making up the prime crew for the Apollo-Soyuz Test Project during a visit to Disney World #OTD in 1975. The visit took place at the end of a 3-day tour of the launch facilities at @NASAKennedy in Florida.
#NASAhistory

in reply to NASA

Alexei Leonov was quite a friendly and interesting man. esa.int/About_Us/ESA_history/A…


In the very middle of this #HubbleFriday image is a galaxy... but you might have to look very closely to find it.

The newly discovered dwarf galaxy Donatiello II is seen nestled among a smattering of distant stars and even more distant galaxies: go.nasa.gov/3DUC4bb
#Hubble



Siling Lake – one of the largest water bodies on the Tibetan Plateau – hasn’t plateaued! The lake has been growing in recent decades.

An astronaut on the @Space_Station took this image of Siling Lake on Dec. 4, 2021, when the lake wasn’t frozen over. 💧:go.nasa.gov/3DVx46h
#NASAEarth



In this preliminary damage proxy map, made with data from #Landsat and Japan’s ALOS-2 satellite, dark red areas are likely to have severe damage to buildings, homes, and infrastructure or changes to the landscape. Orange and yellow areas are moderately or partially damaged.
#NASAEarth


NASA and other agencies are using satellites to map damage caused by the 7.8 and 7.5 earthquakes in southern Türkiye and western Syria on Feb. 6. go.nasa.gov/3lp7K22
#NASAEarth


As new data become available, NASA’s Earth Applied Sciences team is posting near real-time imagery and data products related to the earthquake on its mapping portal.

Get the updates: go.nasa.gov/3jPsHTq
#NASAEarth



ZTF meets ATLAS

Image Credit & Copyright: Stefan Bemmerl

apod.nasa.gov/apod/ap230210.ht… #APOD

#APOD


If you are feeling out of sorts, try a grounding exercise. There are some suggestions here: drcordes.com/blog/2014/11/24/e…


The first exoplanet image was taken from 230 light-years away. Because 2M1207 b orbits a brown dwarf at a great distance, it was possible to separate the light from planet and (failed) star. @NASAHubble took a later look and that science informed a planet illustration.
#NASAExoplanets


Exoplanets are far away and hard to see. They are often obscured by the much brighter light of their stars, so capturing their images is hard, but not impossible. The first exoplanet image, by @ESO, was obtained in 2004. go.nasa.gov/40HwVNn
#NASAExoplanets
in reply to NASA

🤔 😉 😂
I need that "thinking dude" meme gif to put here. (but I'm afraid google AI will give me something else)


We're getting unprecedented and groundbreaking science from @NASAWebb, but it hasn't seen exoplanet surfaces. It did capture four views in different bands of infrared of an exoplanet last year. 👀
We can't wait to see what's next! go.nasa.gov/4850
#NASAExoplanets


Our latest release in the NASA History Series is now out! 📘

NACA to NASA to Now by former NASA Chief Historian Roger Launius tells the story of the NACA and its successor NASA. Download the free e-book and tag someone you think might enjoy a copy! go.nasa.gov/3DUHfI2
#NASAhistory



For no particular reason, we're thinking about Jupiter's volcanic moon Io today. Our #JunoMission will fly by it on March 1, but you can make a virtual visit anytime at: solarsystem.nasa.gov/io

Oh, and happy #NationalPizzaDay
#NASASolarSystem

in reply to NASA

I love pizza! And scientific exploration! This is an awesome day!


The Exp 68 crew is studying the brain and digestive system today while waiting for a space delivery this weekend. blogs.nasa.gov/spacestation/20…
#ISS
#iss


Congrats to our very own Dr. Jonathan Gardner, Webb deputy senior project scientist, for being named a 2023 Fellow for the American Astronomical Society. He is recognized for exceptional community service and scientific leadership of Webb’s science teams: go.nasa.gov/3HPBhtb
#JamesWebb


The first Black astronaut in history to perform a spacewalk!

STS-63 Mission Specialist Bernard Harris gained this distinction #OTD in 1995. Before his 1990 selection as an astronaut, Dr. Harris worked at @NASA_Johnson as a flight surgeon & clinical scientist. #BlackHistoryMonth
#NASAhistory



“Ring” in the start of a new spokes season!

On the planet Saturn, spokes are suspected to be caused by the interaction between the planet’s magnetic field and solar wind.

You can see two smudgy spokes on the rings on the left side of this new image: go.nasa.gov/3xcbdn2
#Hubble




.@NASAVoyager first observed these spokes from afar. Cassini saw them up close. And now @NASAHubble research provides a new view. Together, the data from these missions can help planetary scientists uncover the mysteries of the spokes.
#NASASolarSystem


A new panorama from @MarsCuriosity provides some of the clearest evidence yet that ancient waves once lapped Martian lakeshores—in a region that scientists didn't expect: go.nasa.gov/3XjGTBy
#NASA
#NASA
in reply to NASA

still amazes me that we can see photos from another planet.


Apollo 14 splashed down in the Pacific Ocean #OTD in 1971 after a successful 9-day mission! It was the last of the Apollo missions to quarantine the astronauts upon their return. More on the completion of the mission: go.nasa.gov/3XayznR

📷 Astronaut Ed Mitchell disembarks
#NASAhistory



A dried-out Lake Hamun means more dust storms.

The seasonal lake in the Sistan Basin of eastern Iran and southern Afghanistan has been shrinking, reducing vegetation cover and exposing silt and dust. This makes the area a major source of dust storms. go.nasa.gov/3RJ79UZ
#NASAEarth



This is just one dust storm, but the cumulative effect of Earth's dust storms can have significant effects on the atmosphere.

A UCLA research team found airborne dust has likely increased by 55% on a global scale since pre-industrial times. go.nasa.gov/3RJ79UZ
#NASAEarth



The series of maps below show dust spreading toward the south over Pakistan, India, and the Arabian Sea during six-hour intervals on January 12.

The data came from NASA’s Goddard Earth Observing System (GEOS) modeling system.
#NASAEarth



Nacreous Clouds over Lapland apod.nasa.gov/apod/ap230209.ht… #APOD
#APOD


It’s spokes season!

On Saturn, mysterious “spokes” appear on its rings near the planet’s seasonal equinoxes.

Scientists suspect they are caused by Saturn’s magnetic field interacting with solar wind from the Sun, but this hypothesis is unconfirmed: go.nasa.gov/3RN8SZd
#Hubble



Nearly three tons of cargo aboard the ISS Progress 83 resupply ship is racing toward the station after launching at 1:15am today. It arrives Saturday at 3:49am. More... go.nasa.gov/3YAkWzh
#ISS
#iss


Nacreous Clouds over Lapland

Image Credit & Copyright: Dennis Lehtonen

apod.nasa.gov/apod/ap230209.ht… #APOD

#APOD


The ISS Progress 83 cargo craft counts down to a launch at 1:15am ET today to resupply the Exp 68 crew live on @nasa TV. blogs.nasa.gov/spacestation/20…
#ISS
#iss @NASA


Light is a messenger of the universe. And there's so much light beyond what our eyes can perceive. Our space telescopes observe various wavelengths to give us the most information possible; put it all together and you get to know worlds we can't yet see! go.nasa.gov/3RHtp1v
#NASAExoplanets


See the full, high-resolution panorama at: go.nasa.gov/3lfRwbn
#NASAMars


How do we communicate with spacecraft? For decades, satellites have beamed data back to Earth by way of radio waves. Now we're exploring laser communications, @NASA_Technology that will allow us to receive more data from farther than ever before: nasa.gov/lasercomms
#NASA
#NASA


Watch a Progress cargo ship, loaded with nearly three tons of food, supplies, and fuel, launch to the @Space_Station on Feb. 9: go.nasa.gov/3I6aslI

Live NASA TV coverage begins at 1am ET (0600 UTC): nasa.gov/live
#NASA

#NASA


10,000 galaxies in a single shot.
This sonification of the @NASAHubble Ultra Deep Field (2014) plays a note for each galaxy when it emitted the light seen in the image. In under a minute, we can hear back nearly 13 billion years to the farthest galaxies. go.nasa.gov/3xr2EVT
#NASAExoplanets
in reply to NASA

Does the appearance of ancient galaxies mean that we’re seeing the light of galaxies that no longer exist, or that their light is only now reaching us through the expanse of time?


“The uncrewed flight test that we conducted in late 2022 told us that we are absolutely on the right path for our Moon to Mars Program.”

Mission Manager Mike Sarafin discusses #Artemis I on the latest episode of the Small Steps, Giant Leaps podcast: go.nasa.gov/3YhP1nq
#NASAArtemis #Artemis



Do you ever see faces in things? That's a phenomenon called pareidolia, and it's when our brains see familiar shapes in objects or data, like in the cloud clouds or the cosmos. Here are some of our favorite examples of pareidolia in space: go.nasa.gov/3jIDzCp
#NASA
#NASA


A Progress resupply rocket counts down to launch at 1:15am ET on Thursday, while the Exp 68 crew works brain research and orbital plumbing. blogs.nasa.gov/spacestation/20…
#ISS
#iss


The @MarsCuriosity rover has discovered lots of evidence for ancient lakes on Mars, but what mission scientists saw in this new panorama surprised them. More: go.nasa.gov/3lfRwbn
#NASAMars


After 2 years of study, NASA announced the selection of 5 possible Apollo landing sites on the Moon #OTD in 1968. The Sea of Tranquility (Site 2) was where Apollo 11 ultimately landed.

Read about the criteria that NASA used to choose the landing sites: go.nasa.gov/3Yjj3r1
#NASAhistory



Compare the Apollo landing site criteria to those for the crewed Artemis III mission that will land near the Moon's South Pole!👇 go.nasa.gov/3DQlokX
#NASAhistory
in reply to NASA

For the maximum convenience for the lander crew, might I suggest somewhere near here?

weeklyworldnews.com/headlines/…

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