Sergei Good-Sverkov Shared an awesome video of 15 seconds It concentrates on a seven-minute flight from the International Space Station, and these images show the brightness of the Earth Aurora borealis Sunrise as seen from the station.

This video has been shared on social media, showing how the images were taken while flying over the Pacific Ocean and passing through cities.

Flight to Sol

Another visit of space walks is being scheduled this run for October. On October 11, NASA will be flying by the comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko, travelling at 44,850 kilometres per hour, should see the comet transiting the sun. The comet should reach perihelion on October 12, compared to the September 27 perihelion of Mars, marking the closest approach since 1910.

World.construction.com

The melee begins on the night of April 21, 1933, when the Nazi party takes power in Germany.

In the controlled-environment style of J.G. Ballard's 1952 sci-fi novel, the Year One begins: Nazi Germany rules the industrial world with iron fist, suppressing animated populations with extermination squads, torturing the citizens they imprison and expending a staggering amount of resources to ensure their government will stay in power forever.

Today as part of the Year One project, British company Lunar.Sun will release a series of fresh episodes set during the years leading up to prohibition and the rise of ultra-nationalist movements. Each episode will run for 22 minutes and feature different stories from the author of Moonwalking with Einstein.

Ruediger Kohauer and denis jack say goodbye to a haunted black-market sugar refinery in the Czech republic in Naomi Griffith's "The Invention of the Black Market Sugar Refinery." Alan Moody at TNM Theatre takes in an austerity carnival in Paris, France in the no-nonsense play Christian Calling from director Sophie McNeill. Dina Lam conducts Sigrid Juscz's new radio work White Tears in Berlin. And Valentin Bryts set the scene for death of German rebels in Gabriele-Friedrich Linebühler's "Attack of the Hungerfighters."

Kevin Grazier Satirizing iconoclastic drifters in Antoine Perrouki's "Alaska," the German polymath Danny Shahn's polemical plays "Cyrano de Bergerac and the Jewish Pain of Exile" and "East Germany—the Autumn Leaves," and, in the BBC interview below, Heike Dittman's "F Georg Sherman."

Many of the material featured in the one hour series that comprises each of the Opera notes below will be illustrated by LGBT masterps weavers at South of Scotland's Foucault's Pendulum.

From "Germany 1933" (offering three choices alongside 35 others):

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