General Discussion
Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsStunning photo captures space station crossing the moon in jaw-dropping detail

Thierry Legault pointed his camera up at the night sky and waited for the International Space Station to cross in front of the moon.
Then, like a water strider on a pond, the Earth-orbiting laboratory skated over the pool of lunar light. He had a half-second to get the shot. Click.
Legault caught a spectacular picture of the spaceship on Jan. 18, with the crusty, mottled moon in full form behind it. The silhouette of the space station is so clear, observers can make out a faint grid pattern on its solar panel arrays. The attached SpaceX Crew-3 spacecraft, which brought up NASA astronauts Raja Chari, Tom Marshburn, and Kayla Barron, as well as European Space Agency astronaut Matthias Maurer in November, is easily identifiable.
The image is among the most detailed snapshots ever taken of the space station passing in front of the moon. Astronomers refer to such an event as a "lunar transit." Bill Ingalls, senior contract photographer for NASA headquarters, was so impressed, he retweeted it.
https://mashable.com/article/space-station-moon-transit-photo
panader0
(25,816 posts)trusty elf
(7,548 posts)
Stuart G
(38,726 posts)jaxexpat
(7,794 posts)It isn't every day one gets to see the French invading the moon. Not since the Jules Verne expedition filmed live by Tom Hanks, if I recall correctly.
mnhtnbb
(33,348 posts)Lonestarblue
(13,479 posts)skydive forever
(512 posts)Built the solid rocket boosters and external tank for all but about 10 Space Shuttle flights. A wonderful career.
rhiannon55
(2,786 posts)3Hotdogs
(15,368 posts)My mom was proud, she made a very, verry small part that wen into the first nuclear submarine, Nautilus. The sub is now a museum in New London, Ct. and I guess her contribution is still there.... somewhere - maybe 15' 2' from the steering wheel.
3Hotdogs
(15,368 posts)My mom was proud, she made a very, verry small part that wen into the first nuclear submarine, Nautilus. The sub is now a museum in New London, Ct. and I guess her contribution is still there.... somewhere - maybe 15' 2' from the steering wheel. Or maybe it's ...
Delphinus
(12,522 posts)I bet it was a wonderful career!! Thanks for what you did - hope you are enjoying retirement.
colorado_ufo
(6,251 posts)Stunning!
niyad
(132,440 posts)question everything
(52,132 posts)Tanuki
(16,446 posts)