Steampunk station

Bad Astronomy
By Phil Plait
Aug 29, 2011 9:12 PMNov 19, 2019 8:52 PM

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I can't help but think of Jules Verne when I see this spectacular picture of Europe at night, as seen by astronauts aboard the International Space Station on August 10, 2011:

[Click to ennemonate.] It's not so much that the cities shown are Verne's own -- though you can see London (bottom left), and Paris (to the right of the dark swath of the English Channel). It's the color. The brassy lights of the city, some fuzzed by clouds, are classic steampunk.

As you can see from the map, the station was high over the southern British Isles when this picture was taken. The view stretches for hundreds of kilometers, so a lot of major European cities are visible from that vantage point (NASA has a labeled shot to guide you). We owe a lot to Jules Verne for his soaring imagination, including the inspiration to learn enough to go into space in the first place. I imagine he would have loved to been able to see a picture like this. After all, he predicted it. ... but upon thinking on it, I realized that, in a way, if only briefly and in name, he did get this view. Image credit: NASA


Related posts: - A puzzling planet picture from the ISS - Followup: City lights from space - Turns out, it *is* a river in Egypt (one of my most popular posts ever) - Followup: the Nile river from space

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