Pictures and albums about Atmosphere published in good times

related tags for atmosphere

Albums about atmosphere

published by lowkapow
More pics from our debut hardcore night!!
Atmosphere- backgrounds- inisde
published by grazie_ristorante
published by cougarrk
The last total lunar eclipse until 2010 occurred Wednesday Feb 20 2008, with cameo appearances by Saturn and the bright star Regulus on either side of the veiled full moon. The sky was partly cloudy and the photographs were taken in Las Vegas Nevada USA
published by inns24
i am not a groupie and north carolina is sweet
published by silbersam
These shots were taken between December 23rd and December 31st 2006, the last Christmas we spent with my father. Amanda flew up from Santiago, Chile, as we drove down from DC to pick her up in Miami airport. We drove across Alligator A
published by mariellefrigault
Pictures taken during the 10 days of the 40th "Festival d'ete de Quebec" to show you the atmosphere in the streets of Quebec during this event
published by directbizkit
Pictures that I need to have online for one reason or another.

Pictures about atmosphere

picture: 02-20-2008 (110)
published by: cougarrk
A total lunar eclipse occurs when the full moon passes into Earth's shadow and is blocked from the sun's rays that normally illuminate it. During an eclipse, the sun, Earth and moon line up, leaving a darkened moon visible to observers on the night side of the planet. The moon doesn't go black because indirect sunlight still reaches it after passing through the Earth's atmosphere. Since the atmosphere filters out blue light, the indirect light that reaches the moon transforms it into a reddish or orange tinge, depending on how much dust and cloud cover are in the atmosphere at the time.
picture: 02-20-2008 (112)
published by: cougarrk
A total lunar eclipse occurs when the full moon passes into Earth's shadow and is blocked from the sun's rays that normally illuminate it. During an eclipse, the sun, Earth and moon line up, leaving a darkened moon visible to observers on the night side of the planet. The moon doesn't go black because indirect sunlight still reaches it after passing through the Earth's atmosphere. Since the atmosphere filters out blue light, the indirect light that reaches the moon transforms it into a reddish or orange tinge, depending on how much dust and cloud cover are in the atmosphere at the time.

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