NASA Astronomy Picture of the Day 2015 October 14
Is there anything interesting to see in the direction opposite the Sun? One night last month, there were quite a few things. First, the red-glowing orb on the lower right of the featured image is the full moon, darkened and reddened because it has entered Earth’s shadow. Beyond Earth’s cone of darkness are backscattering dust particles orbiting the Sun that standout with a diffuse glow called the gegenschein, visible as a faint band rising from the central horizon and passing behind the Moon. A nearly horizontal stripe of green airglow is also discernable just above the horizon, partly blocked by blowing orange sand.
Visible in the distant sky as the blue dot near the top of the image is the star Sirius, while the central band of our Milky Way Galaxy arches up on the image left and down again on the right. The fuzzy light patches just left of center are the Large and Small Magellanic Clouds. Red emission nebulas too numerous to mention are scattered about the sky, but are labelled in a companion annotated image.
Asteroid explorer Psyche "Asteroid explorer Psyche, near-Earth asteroid hunter NEOCam & Veritas to Venus among proposals selected for potential future NASA mission."
R2D2 being the cutest robot in the universe.
Why Chewbacca doesn't grill (my first attempt at video editing, I know far from perfect).
"What in the name of sanity have you got on your head?" "It's a fez. I wear a fez now. Fezzes are cool." #fezzesarecool #DoctorWho
Omg, why would you do this? ...because you can't! 😱😱 "Subway jump fail"
Seriously, I should not look at these while eating! "Skiing to the extreme 😏 #PeopleAreAmazing"