thom_astro_33653789553_Niagara_Falls.jpg 137F1442Thumbnails134E3825137F1442Thumbnails134E3825137F1442Thumbnails134E3825137F1442Thumbnails134E3825
Proxima was the name given to ESA astronaut Thomas Pesquet’s six-month mission on the International Space Station. He worked on the weightless research laboratory and ran scientific experiments for hundreds of researchers on Earth. Thomas left our planet on 17 November 2016 from Baikonur cosmodrome in Kazakhstan on a Soyuz rocket with NASA astronaut Peggy Whitson and commander-cosmonaut Oleg Novitsky and returned to Earth on 15 May 2017. This image was taken on 26/04/2017 by Thomas Pesquet during the Proxima mission and was published on social media with the following comments in English and French. "Not easy to spot the Niagara falls from space, but once you find them, you’re baffled!" "Pas faciles à prendre en photo, mais voilà les chutes du Niagara, à la frontière entre le Canada et les Etats-Unis ! On distingue à quel point elles sont abruptes. J’apprends qu’il y a beaucoup de manières de classifier les chutes d’eau (débit, hauteur, etc) et que chacune est un peu la meilleure du monde ;)"

Information
Taken in
Space
Author
ESA
Description
Proxima was the name given to ESA astronaut Thomas Pesquet’s six-month mission on the International Space Station. He worked on the weightless research laboratory and ran scientific experiments for hundreds of researchers on Earth. Thomas left our planet on 17 November 2016 from Baikonur cosmodrome in Kazakhstan on a Soyuz rocket with NASA astronaut Peggy Whitson and commander-cosmonaut Oleg Novitsky and returned to Earth on 15 May 2017. This image was taken on 26/04/2017 by Thomas Pesquet during the Proxima mission and was published on social media with the following comments in English and French. "Not easy to spot the Niagara falls from space, but once you find them, you’re baffled!" "Pas faciles à prendre en photo, mais voilà les chutes du Niagara, à la frontière entre le Canada et les Etats-Unis ! On distingue à quel point elles sont abruptes. J’apprends qu’il y a beaucoup de manières de classifier les chutes d’eau (débit, hauteur, etc) et que chacune est un peu la meilleure du monde ;)"

Source link
https://www.flickr.com/photos/thom_astro/albums/72157713727843823
Visits
13
Rating score
no rate
Rate this photo
License
CC BY-SA 3.0 IGO
Modified by WikiArchives
No (original)
Downloads
0
EXIF Metadata
NIKON CORPORATION NIKON D4
Make
NIKON CORPORATION
Model
NIKON D4
DateTimeOriginal
2017:04:26 19:16:27
ApertureFNumber
f/10.0