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Astronauts Tweet AMAZING Photos From International Space Station (PICTURES)

AP     First Posted: 11/20/10 11:52 AM ET   Updated: 05/25/11 07:15 PM ET

(MARCIA DUNN, AP/Huffington Post) CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. — Earthlings are seeing their planet in a whole new light, thanks to NASA and its astronauts aboard the Internet-wired space station. They're beaming down dazzling images and guess-this-mystery-location photos via Twitter and have even launched a game. Landlubbers the world over are eating it up. From schoolchildren to grown-up business entrepreneurs and artists, the public is captivated and can't seem to get enough.

It's clear from the photos why orbiting astronauts rate Earth-gazing as their favorite pastime.

"The Earth never disappoints," the commander of the International Space Station, Douglas Wheelock, said in a broadcast interview Thursday.

Known to his nearly 68,000 Twitter followers as Astro_Wheels, Wheelock has been posting impressive photos of the Earth and some of his thoughts ever since he moved into the space station in June, five months after it got Internet access.

"It's been a real thrill to be able to do that," said Wheelock.

Wheelock's photos this week included Mount Fuji in Japan as well as the aurora borealis, or northern lights, with a glittering space station solar wing in the foreground.

"Aurora Borealis as I will forever paint it in my dreams. Almost time to return home," wrote Wheelock, whose mission ends next week.

Jason Major, a Dallas-based graphic designer for a sunglass company, responded with a "beautiful" via Twitter.

"Just to get a perspective like that from 225 miles up is really incredible," Major told The Associated Press on Friday. "As I sit here at my desk and go about my day, to see what they're doing and their perspective of the world is really amazing."

Major has a website to showcase snapshots of "our cosmic backyard." He provides links to some of the astronauts' photos. http://www.lightsinthedark.com

"When they're looking down, we're looking up at the same time," said Major. "It's not just these quote-unquote dusty, old NASA archive photos that you're looking at. You're looking at something as it's happening right now."

The space station's newest American resident, Scott Kelly, has gotten into the act and already has nearly 10,000 followers on Twitter from around the world. Just this week, he kicked off a geography trivia game, posting an image of twinkling lights at night and what looks to be the outline of a boot.

"This country's contributions to science include the barometer, electric battery, nitroglycerin and wireless telegraphy to boot. Name it!" Kelly wrote in his Twitter account Monday.

Most guessed Italy, including MrsQclasstweets.

Mrs. Q is actually Heather Quasny, a third-grade math and science teacher at Ralph Parr Elementary School in League City, Texas, just several miles from NASA's Johnson Space Center. She said her students enjoy trying to identify a place on Earth from an actual photo rather than an atlas or map. It's a way to excite a new generation of learners, she said.

"It's really cool to see them so engaged," she said.

For Quasny, the photos provide an opportunity to discuss space station life with her students.

"One of the things we talk about are, what are they actually doing up there? What is the point? They don't go up there for a good time," said Quasny, who happens to be married to a space station flight controller.

Eileen Hughes, who runs an online fabric shop with her daughter in Pennsauken, N.J., looks forward to getting the astronauts' pictures. She was fascinated with this week's "mystery island" shot by Wheelock, which turned out to be Juan de Nova Island near Madagascar.

"It's awesome," she said.

As for Kelly's game – which will continue throughout his six-month mission – he announced a winner Friday afternoon. It was the first person to answer correctly, via a tweet.

"Now play," he urged.

See stunning photos tweeted from space, which initially appeared here, below.

Aurora Borealis Over North America (May)
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___

Online:

NASA: http://tinyurl.com/2e8jelf

Astronauts on Twitter: http://twitter.com/NASA/astronauts-in-space-now

Lights in the Dark: http://www.lightsinthedark.com

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(MARCIA DUNN, AP/Huffington Post) CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. — Earthlings are seeing their planet in a whole new light, thanks to NASA and its astronauts aboard the Internet-wired space station. They'...
(MARCIA DUNN, AP/Huffington Post) CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. — Earthlings are seeing their planet in a whole new light, thanks to NASA and its astronauts aboard the Internet-wired space station. They'...
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
JScott
John Galt's last name is McGuffin-Smithee
10:50 AM on 11/24/2010
Hmm I just found out they are building the causeway from Bahrain to Qatar from these photos, it the gulf shallow at those parts to build a causeway across seems like they coulda gone shorter routes across water to adjacent Qatar islands.
07:01 PM on 11/23/2010
Astonishing images.
12:18 AM on 11/23/2010
Really amazing
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LMPE
I connect the most dissimilar things
10:30 PM on 11/22/2010
I wonder if photos taken by the ISS can catch people mooning the sky
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Prousa
Intelligence and Tolerance are not unAmerican.
12:33 PM on 11/22/2010
so great
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Carbon Forteetoo
Not enough characters to say anything clev
11:46 AM on 11/22/2010
Moscow looks like the Borg have taken over.

It's too bad so much wealth is being concentrated in the bank accounts of hedge fund managers, bankers who produce nothing, else there'd be more available for awesome NASA stuff. (Not to mention Social Security and Universal Healthcare. But I guess its more important that the wealthy few have massive bank balances.)
06:17 AM on 11/22/2010
Uluru? Bwahaha. It's Ayer's rock. And no amount of guilt is going to change that.
09:31 AM on 11/22/2010
To the victor goes the spoils of war...or its it; war spoils the victor? In your case I'd say the latter is true.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
StephenJK
All your consciousness are belong to us
09:37 AM on 11/22/2010
It was named Uluru before that white guy was "honored" by slappin his name on it. Effing ridiculous.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
01:55 AM on 11/22/2010
One of the few times HuffPost used the word "amazing" properly.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
krayonc
Travel is fatal to prejudice & bigotry.
11:32 PM on 11/21/2010
astronaut tweets = beyond cool
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SuperMoncho
The worst kind of prejudice is the kind against me
07:48 PM on 11/21/2010
Stunning Images Indeed
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
JohnUSA
Just keep swimming, just keep swimming...
03:36 PM on 11/21/2010
Wow, stunning images. Thanks for this article.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
SilentSolidarity
So what do you need? Besides a miracle.
03:02 PM on 11/21/2010
I really hope we will have space hotels by  or before 2050.
03:27 PM on 11/21/2010
We probably will.  Bigelow Aerospace has already ground-tested their innovative space hab modules (Sundancer and Nautilus).  They're just waiting for SpaceX and Boeing to flight-test their Dragon and CST-100 spacecraft, which will provide transport to and from the orbiting station.

SpaceX is planning to launch their first Dragon cargo spacecraft on a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket in December. The spacecraft will orbit the Earth a few times demonstrating maneuvering capabilities before reentering the atmosphere and splashing down softly off the coast of Southern California.

Dragon is designed to carry passengers with the addition of a CO2 scrubber, an integrated abort system, and a glass cockpit.  The abort system also adds the capability to land on the ground (for example on the dry lake bed at Edwards AFB) instead of in the water.

Bigelow's Sundancer module is designed to launch on Falcon 9, and the larger Nautilus module may launch on Falcon 9 Heavy (which has three parallel boosters instead of one).  Both modules feature multilayer skins that inflate to a larger diameter after reaching orbit.  These skins are lighter and tougher against micrometeorite debris impacts than conventional aluminum shells.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
SilentSolidarity
So what do you need? Besides a miracle.
03:54 PM on 11/21/2010
Wow. Thanks for the info. Do you think they plan to order the modules so that they will form a torus that can simulate gravitation when it rotates?
11:15 AM on 11/21/2010
I can see my house!
02:59 PM on 11/21/2010
I can see the c h e m-t r a i l s...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
SilentSolidarity
So what do you need? Besides a miracle.
03:01 PM on 11/21/2010
"Seems like a fair price ... but luggage will cost $10,000 per bag and a cocktail is $250.

It adds up.

Then again, lots of frequent flier miles.

Screening at the gate is going to be intense, though.

You get a colonoscopy first."
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If someone would ask me whether I would like to live in a space colony or the moon I would go. I would rather spend $600k on a small space apartment overseeing earth than on some average real estate down here in San Diego County. :)
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
StephenJK
All your consciousness are belong to us
09:42 AM on 11/22/2010
I hope you don't like to enjoy sunlight very much because without atmosphere you'll be fried like piece of KFC chicken. It would also become very depressing, to say the least.
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srheard
Life is full of a number of things.
10:27 AM on 11/21/2010
I was struck by the large scale manmade structures in Egypt (irrigation fields) and Arabia (artificially constructed islands). Like the Nazca lines in Peru, they are only artistic if seen from high above. Cool.
10:21 AM on 11/21/2010
These pictures are breath taking. I love looking at the slide show from Nasa.gov (type picture of the day in their search then view slideshow). It has some awesome pictures such as this http://www.nasa.gov/multimedia/imagegallery/iotd.html
Kennedy Space Center in Florida is a must-go if you're in Florida. It's about I believe 45 min to an hour from Disney. Truly awesome