Long-exposure picture of stars over an aurora in Sweden.
the aft section of the International Space Station with Earth in the background.
Picture of a solar filament taken by a NASA satellite.
a feature on Mars that looks like a melted happy face.
Satellite picture of Berlin under snow cover.
Mosaic of 20 comets discovered by a NASA satellite.
Star-Struck AuroraStars wheeling across the sky seem to cut through a fiery aurora in a recently released long-exposure picture taken in western Sweden.Auroras can appear in different colors depending on the types of gases in the atmosphere and where these gases are. Auroras happen when energized particles form the sun interact with air molecules and give them extra charge. These "excited" molecules then emit light. Oxygen, for example, can create auroras in yellow-green to red, while nitrogen emits light in blues and purples.
Photograph by P-M Heden, TWAN

Space Pictures This Week: Fiery Aurora, Surreal Venus, More

Stars swirl through the northern lights, the moon and Venus meet over the Alps, and more in the week's best space pictures.

February 05, 2011

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