Dr.Roberat Bondar as born in ont 4 dec 1945
The moon always keeps the same "side" facing Earth, which also means that the other half of its surface is always facing away from Earth. The only ways to see that side are: -- Send a robotic spacecraft to orbit the moon. Have it photograph the back side when it's there, and then send those photos to Earth when it comes back around to our side. -- Send people in a spacecraft to orbit the moon. Have them photograph the back side when they're there, and then send those photos to Earth when they come back around to our side, or else save them up and bring the photos back to Earth with them.
The ground or the earth, as in firm territory.
Zero Volts, Ground, or Earth. All current flows to this. It stand for NO POTENTIAL. A ground can be elevated to 100v that is the return for that particular circuit sitting 100 volts from earth.
The end of the atmosphere is about 63 miles above the surface of earth
They take photos of the Moon by means of Artificial satellites. Then they integrate them. And after that they name places as like we do on earth. This is by S.S for JW's 2a class.
One common term for such photos is a "satellite photograph" but this usually refers to photos of earth taken from satellites. There can be other terms depending on what or who is taking the photo and what the photo is of.
Photos are taken digitally on-board Hubble, stored on an internal computer and then downloaded to earth based computers over a wireless data link. Slower but similar in some ways to WiFi data used by laptops, or data transmissions used by digital cell phones.
They are real photos
because you are taking out air or gravity out of the ground so there is more gravity in the ground so the dirt will just go down through the earth
because you are taking out air or gravity out of the ground so there is more gravity in the ground so the dirt will just go down through the earth
Most are fomed in limestone uplands by dissolution of the rock by ground-water, so they form drains taking the rain falling on the hills to springs in the valleys. That's what they do on Earth!
In Google Earth there is a Photos layer (includes Panoramio and 360 Cities) which if checked will show photos in the selected view. Click the square "photo" icon on map to see the photos in a popup.
Unless it is a stationary vehicle where you can stick a spike into the ground, you can't ground earth a car. Aside of a chassis ground, the closest you can get to an earth ground is through the vehicle's tires, which ground you in the event of a lightning strike to the vehicle.
Some of the most famous Earth photos are taken by NASA. Spectacular views of Earth from space, of the moon, and of the famous "Blue Marble" are those accredited to being taken by NASA.
Yes. Ground and Earth is the same thing.
Photos taken of Earth from an orbiting satellite
== My interest with Google Earth was rekindled when I read Mawee's entry showing a captured image of her house from Google Earth. Instantly, I opened Google Earth from my PC & explored it, then I remembered Panoramio.com, I submitted some photos on panoramio. So what the heck is Panoramio, it is a site that offers online photo storage, as an additional feature, the possibility of showing your photos on Google Earth. I started uploading & mapping my photos on Panoramio last May, there was no promise of your photos to be shown on Google Earth in an instance, it takes time. Yesterday, after ignoring Panoramio for about 2 months, my photos finally appeared on Google Earth. I have submitted 16 photos, 13 of which are now available & viewable through Google Earth, here are the 13 photos featured: i found this on another web page hope this helps! To copy a screenshot of Google Earth, go to Edit, then Copy Image. (or press Ctrl+Alt+C) You can then copy this image into Paint or any other picture editing program.