NASA shares new photos of ISS shot from SpaceX Crew Dragon

NASA has shared a new set of photos showing the International Space Station (ISS) in orbit.

The images were taken by astronaut Thomas Pesquet aboard a SpaceX Crew Dragon spacecraft as it performed a flyaround of the orbiting outpost earlier this month.

Thomas Pesquet/ESA

The flight took place at the start of the journey home for Pesquet and three fellow Crew-2 astronauts following a six-month stay aboard the space station.

Thomas Pesquet/ESA

The pictures were taken with a Nikon D5 DSLR camera, the same camera that Pesquet used to capture many of his amazing Earth images during his time aboard the ISS.

Thomas Pesquet/ESA

Pesquet’s ISS images show the satellite from multiple angles, with both the blackness of space and Earth 250 miles below serving as a backdrop.

Thomas Pesquet/ESA

Prominent in most of the photos are the space station’s large solar arrays that help to power the facility.

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The ISS went into operation two decades ago and functions as a space-based laboratory that allows astronauts from multiple countries to conduct scientific experiments in microgravity conditions.

Thomas Pesquet/ESA

The space station is traveling at about 17,500 mph, orbiting Earth once every 90 minutes or so.

Thomas Pesquet/ESA

The station is 356 feet (109 meters) end-to-end, “one yard shy of the full length of an American football field including the end zones,” NASA says.

Thomas Pesquet/ESA

The space agency describes the facility’s living and working space as “larger than a six-bedroom house (and has six sleeping quarters, two bathrooms, a gym, and a 360-degree view bay window).”

Thomas Pesquet/ESA

To find out more about how astronauts spend their time aboard the space station, check out these fascinating videos made aboard the ISS over the last 20 years.

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