-
Lucky Shot
Photograph by Oshin D. Zakarian, TWAN
A Perseid meteor zips over Iran's Alamut Castle in an August 12 picture submitted to the astronomy-education project The World at Night.
The Perseids, which occur annually when Earth and the moon pass through a cloud of rocky particles shed by comet Swift-Tuttle, often provide an impressive show for sky-watchers—including photographer Oshin D. Zakarian.
"Just came back from Perseid-meteor shooting," he wrote with his submission, "and this time I was lucky!"
(Also see "Perseid Pictures: Meteors With Aurora, Seen From Space, More.")
Published August 16, 2012
-
Mars Touchdown
Image courtesy MSSS/Caltech/NASA
NASA's Curiosity rover took this color image of gravel-colored ground on Mars just minutes after touching down on the red planet on August 8.
A sliver of sunlight passing through the structure of the rover—whose wheel is visible at top left—illuminates the surface. The largest rock fragment in the image is about two inches (five centimeters) long.
(Get the full story of Curiosity's mission in the National Geographic e-book Mars Landing 2012.)
Published August 16, 2012
-
Spanish Gold
Photograph courtesy NASA
Valencia, Spain, glimmers like gold treasure in an August 4 picture taken from the International Space Station. With a population exceeding two million, Valencia is the country's third largest city.
(Related: "Twenty Stunning Shots of Earth from Space.")
Published August 16, 2012
-
Pipe Nebula
Image courtesy ESO
Taken at Chile's La Silla Paranal Observatory, a picture released August 15 shows the dark, dusty Pipe Nebula silhouetted against stars close to the center of the Milky Way.
Published August 16, 2012
-
Fiery Failure
Image courtesy NASA
NASA's Project Morpheus vehicle burns after a hardware failure prevented the prototype lander from maintaining stable flight on August 9 at Kennedy Space Center in Florida. Engineers are looking into the cause of the failure, which resulted in no injuries.
Morpheus—designed to improve spacecraft propulsion, landing, and hazard detection—is also intended to carry more than a thousand pounds (450 kilograms) of cargo to the moon.
(See "Pictures: NASA's New Rocket—And Four 'Lost Launchers.'")
Published August 16, 2012
-
Lake Lights
Photograph by Tamas Ladanyi, TWAN
A Perseid meteor zips over a lake in Hungary on August 11.
Hitting Earth's atmosphere at almost a hundred thousand miles (160,000 kilometers) an hour, the meteoroids burn up, producing streaks of light—meteors, or shooting stars—each lasting just a fraction of a second.
(Related: "Perseid Pictures: Meteor Shower Dazzles Every August.")
Published August 16, 2012
-
Lonely Galaxy
Image courtesy ESA/NASA
Without neighbors, the "lonely" galaxy DDO 190 is relatively small and lacks clear structure, according to NASA.
In this recently released Hubble Space Telescope picture, older, reddish stars dot the edges of the so-called dwarf irregular galaxy. Younger, bluish stars crowd its interior.
(See galaxy pictures.)
Published August 16, 2012
-
Martian Future?
Illustration from Mars One/AFP/Getty Images
Designed by a Dutch start-up, the theoretical Mars One capsule lands on the red planet in an artist's conception.
Mars One's designers intend to beat out NASA by sending the first humans to Mars in 2023. Project planners hope to "establish the foundation of a permanent settlement from which we will prosper, learn, and grow," according to the Mars One website.
(See "First Color Mars-Rover Pictures Space Shots of Crashed Gear.")
Published August 16, 2012
-
Trending News
-
6 Snubbed Women in Science
These six scientists were snubbed for awards or robbed of credit for discoveries … because they were women.
-
Why'd Penguins Stop Flying?
Scientists say they've learned why penguin wings, now used for swimming, no longer get the birds off the ground.
-
Brightest Moon Explosion Recorded
A boulder-size meteor slammed into the moon in March, igniting an explosion so bright that anyone looking up at right moment might have spotted it.
Advertisement
News Blogs
-
Steady Hands and Fins
Photographer David Doubilet photographs stingrays, sharks, and more.
-
Survival Guide: Dodging Locusts
Swarm behaviorist Iain Couzin has a toxic reaction to a locust at the same time his team runs out of food.
ScienceBlogs Picks
Got Something to Share?
Special Ad Section
Great Energy Challenge Blog
Sustainable Earth
-
Help Save the Colorado River
NG's new Change the Course campaign launches.
-
New Models for Fishing
Future of Fish is helping fishermen improve their bottom line while better managing stocks for the future.
-
Can Pesticides Grow Organic Crops?
The Change Reaction blog investigates in California.
