9 Out-of-This-World Photos From Space

By Google Arts & Culture

A Cauldron of Stars at the Galaxy Center (2006-01-10) by NASA/JPL-CaltechNASA

Space. The final frontier. It's so dark and infinite that it's hard to even conceive of what exists beyond the bubble of our home planet. But photographs can help; they take a piece of that vast, unimaginable space and quite literally bring it down to Earth.

Scroll on to discover 9 of the most mind-blowing, breathtaking photographs of what lies beyond our world...

GEMINI-TITAN (GT)-12 - EARTH SKY - EXTRAVEHICULAR ACTIVITY (EVA) - OUTER SPACE (1966-11-12)NASA

1. The first selfie in space

Buzz Aldrin claimed that he took the first selfie in space during the Gemini 12 mission on this day in 1966. Here, Buzz is photographed with the pilot's hatch of the spacecraft open.

Mission: Apollo-Saturn 11: Neil Armstrong's boot and foot print on the moon after the first step on the lunar surface (July 16, 1969 - July 24, 1969, printed 1991) by Neil A. ArmstrongThe Museum of Fine Arts, Houston

2. One small step for man, one giant leap for mankind

Here we can see Neil Armstrong's footprint on the moon after the first ever step onto the lunar surface during the Apollo-Saturn 11 mission. It offers a glimpse of the incredible way humans have left their (albeit small) mark on outer space.

Mission: Space Shuttle 41-B, Challenger: Bruce McCandless making the first untethered space walk with the manned maneuvering unit (M. M. U.) (February 3, 1984 - February 11, 1984, printed c. 1991) by AmericanThe Museum of Fine Arts, Houston

3. Don't look down

Taken in 1984, this dizzying photograph shows Bruce McCandless making the first untethered space walk during the Space Shuttle 41-B Challenger mission.

Fiirst color picture taken by Viking 2The Viking Mars Missions Education and Preservation Project

4. The red planet

This image was taken by the Viking 2 lander and is the first ever color photograph taken on the surface of Mars. It shows that the surface is just as red as you'd imagine for the famously 'red planet'.

Mission: Apollo-Saturn 11: Edwin E. "Buzz" Aldrin, Jr. on the moon (July 16, 1969 - July 24, 1969, printed 1991) by Neil A. ArmstrongThe Museum of Fine Arts, Houston

5. "And if thou gaze long into an abyss, the abyss will also gaze into thee" - Friedrich Nietzsche

This photo shows Apollo 11 astronaut Buzz Aldrin standing on the surface of Moon near the leg of Lunar Module "Eagle".

Look closer: what's nice about this image is that you can see a reflection of astronaut Neil Armstrong and the lunar module in Aldrin's face mask.

New Panoramic Picture Taken By Hubble Space Telescope Of Pillars Of Creation (2002-06-12)LIFE Photo Collection

6. The Pillars of Creation

This panoramic image taken by the Hubble Space Telescope shows a high-resolution panoramic view of the "Pillars of Creation," and is one of the orbiting telescope's most famous images. Located at the heart of the Eagle Nebula, a favorite feature for amateur astronomers, the Pillars are giant, gaseous nurseries for newborn stars. The largest of the three Pillars in the 1995 Hubble image is about four light-years from base to tip. But, despite being so vast, the Pillars are only a tiny feature (shown at center) of this huge image produced by the National Science Foundation's 0.9-meter telescope.

Mission: Apollo-Saturn 16: Snapshot of Duke's family on surface of moon (April 16, 1972 - April 27, 1972, printed 1991) by Charles M. Duke, Jr.The Museum of Fine Arts, Houston

7. Home is where the heart is

In 1972, Apollo 16 astronaut Charles Duke left something very personal on the moon: a family portrait. Duke, the youngest man to ever walk on the lunar surface, left this family keepsake so his "whole family can go to the moon".

Despite all of the scientific and technological work that goes into it, this photo shows the human side of space exploration.

Peggy Annette Whitson (2007/2007)Museum of Cosmonautics

8. Reaching for the stars

We often speak of that "one small step for Man", but there are also lots of amazing spacewomen who have equally made giant leaps for space exploration. This image shows astronaut Peggy Whitson working on the assembly of the International Space Station in outer space. Whitson was the first female mission commander of the International Space Station. Her total duration of space flights is record-setting among women, totaling 376 days, 17 hours and 28 minutes.

Deepest Picture Of Space Captured By Nasa Hubble Telescope (2004-03-09)LIFE Photo Collection

9. Gaze into the Great Beyond

Astronomers at the Space Telescope Science Institute unveiled this photo on March 9, 2004. It's a picture of an area in space called the Hubble Ultra Deep Field and was taken by cameras on the NASA Hubble Space Telescope. At the time this was the deepest portrait of the visible universe ever seen.

It shows the swirls of distant galaxies, each of which contains billions of stars.

Hubble Team Unveils Most Colorful View of Universe Captured by Space Telescope (2017-12-08)NASA

Beautiful, and just a little bit terrifying, these images show us a glimpse of the universe beyond our world.

Prehistoric Black Hole Artist Concept (2010-03-17) by NASA/JPL-CaltechNASA

And who knows what photographs from space we'll see in the future: distant solar systems; other Earth-like planets; or perhaps even alien lifeforms. We can only, as our ancestors have always done, look up and imagine...

Discover the Space Exploration project here.

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