Astronaut’s Photos From the ISS Make Earth Look Like a Painting
European Space Agency (ESA) astronaut Matthias Maurer has published a pair of photos of the Arabian Peninsula as seen from the International Space Station, revealing colors and lines that look akin to brush strokes on a painting.
A Unique Perspective of the Arabian Peninsula
Maurer is a German astronaut who joined the ESA in July of 2015. He is undertaking his first mission for the International Space Station (ISS) known as Cosmic Kiss. He is the second ESA astronaut to fly under NASA’s Commercial Crew Program and was launched on November 11, 2021, from the agency’s Kennedy Space Center in Florida, USA, as part of SpaceX Crew-3, alongside NASA astronauts Raja Chari, Thomas Marshburn, and Kayla Barron.
“Seen from above, our Earth looks like a true work of art,” Maurer writes on Twitter. “I took these colorful pictures of the Arabian Peninsula, but I also wonder what these shapes and lines in the desert are.”
When astronaut Thomas Pesquet — who photographed the planet over a quarter of a million times during his time in space — returned to Earth from the ISS, there was a lull in photos taken from the space station.
But Maurer appears more than capable of continuing to expertly document the planet, and it is likely more beautiful aerial scenes will be shared throughout mission Cosmic Kiss.
Mission Cosmic Kiss
Cosmic Kiss is the name of the mission assigned to Maurer where he will supervise and carry out 36 German and more than 100 international experiments on the ISS. According to DLR, these experiments will range from fundamental research to application-oriented science in fields such as life sciences, materials science, physics, biology, medicine, and Earth observation. Detailed information about some of the specific experiments can be found on the German Aerospace Center’s website.
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