ESAHomeAstronautsInternational Space StationResearchEducationExploration
   
Our vision
About human spaceflight
Current missions
PromISSeATVConcordia
Past missions
Multimedia
VideoMultimedia galleryRSS feeds
Resources
Experiment archivePress Releases
Services
CalendarSubscribe
 
 
 
Bookmark and Share
 
 
 

Views from Cupola

The main role of Cupola is to serve as an observatory: it has a clear view of Earth and celestial bodies, and there enough space to accommodate two astronauts holding cameras with telephoto lenses.

Whether targeted Earth observations and scientific measurements or aesthetic and relaxing views, the scenery outside Cupola is impressive. From oil spills, desertification, melting icebergs and glaciers, dust storms, hurricanes and pollution to atmospheric phenomena and auroras – it is a lengthy list of targets.

Even now, when Earth can be studied all the time by many satellites with a variety of sensors, observations from the ISS are important, because there the observer is human. Astronauts not only adapt to changing situations, but also take photos spontaneously, when something interesting is happening.

1 | 2next page
Nightly view of Europe and Africa
New Orleans and Houston with parts of the northern U.S. Gulf coast
Earth and its horizon seen through the windows in Cupola
Typhoon-hit Amami island in Japan
Forest fire in Montana
Mataiva Atoll in the South Pacific Ocean
Aurora Australis
Hurricane Danielle
A sunset on the Indian Ocean
1 | 2next page
 
Node-3 & Cupola
Wonderful vistas from Cupola
Related articles
Space Station gains a new room: Node-3 installedAstronauts enter Space Station’s new Node-3Space Station’s big bay window installedThe Cupola opens its seven eyelids
Related links
Thales Alenia Space Building the ISS
Where is ISS now?
 
 
 
   Copyright 2000 - 2012 © European Space Agency. All rights reserved.