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Wallpapers tagged with 'Scene: Space'.
Each wallpaper on InterfaceLIFT has been tagged with keywords, allowing you to browse for similar content, whether it be by Color, Scene, Location, Medium, Event, Equipment, or Subject.
You are currently browsing the 79 desktop wallpapers that were tagged with 'Scene: Space', beginning with the most popular images. You are on page 6 of 8.
Light in Night - Burning Coast
By ezio
April 17th, 2011
Made with a stock photo taken in Giovinazzo, Bari, Italy. Picture of the Sun by me based on NASA imagery.
Photoshop CS5, Nikon Coolpix S210.
Earthrise
By cynicaleagle
February 26th, 2016
Earthrise from the Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter Camera.
The Moon!
Image Credit: NASA/Goddard/Arizona State University
Icebox Cluster
By Starkiteckt
May 18th, 2014
I have been extremely busy at work, not much time for making artwork, but I managed to get a free Sunday to finish this. :) Thanks for the kind comments on my last pieces!
Created in Adobe Photoshop CS6.
Trion
By Starkiteckt
July 4th, 2014
A boggy planet full of swamps and moisture.
Designed in Photoshop CS6.
Texture credit: http://www.shadedrelief.com/natural3/pages/clouds.html
Atlantis Labyrinth Nebula
By Starkiteckt
September 2nd, 2014
Inspired by the Stargate TV franchise. I miss that show a lot.
Painted in Photoshop CS6.
Serenity
By Starkiteckt
May 29th, 2014
Let your imagination drift into the cosmic void and find solace there... Serenity is waiting.
Created in Adobe Photoshop CS6.
Twilight
By adam kuhlman
June 24th, 2014
I shot this interesting composition while trying to photograph the sunset around Red Mountain in Arizona. The sunset ended up being boring, so I decided to try and shoot the Moon in a way most people aren't used to seeing it. Enjoy!
Adobe Lightroom 5.
Sony SLT-A58, Sony DT 18-55mm F3.5-5.6 SAM II.
Photo Settings: 200mm, f/8, 1/100 second, ISO 100.
Proxima Inferi
By Phil2001
November 12th, 2015
As the imminent collision with the planet's neighbouring moon becomes more apparent. Most of the population have evacuated to space. For the remaining few this is as close to hell as they will ever come.
Just another space wallpaper I made a while ago.
Adobe Photoshop CS6.
The Rich Color Variations of Pluto
January 26th, 2016
NASA's New Horizons spacecraft captured this high-resolution enhanced color view of Pluto on July 14, 2015. The image combines blue, red and infrared images taken by the Ralph/Multispectral Visual Imaging Camera (MVIC). Pluto's surface sports a remarkable range of subtle colors, enhanced in this view to a rainbow of pale blues, yellows, oranges, and deep reds. Many landforms have their own distinct colors, telling a complex geological and climatological story that scientists have only just begun to decode. The image resolves details and colors on scales as small as 0.8 miles (1.3 kilometers).
Credit: NASA/Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory/Southwest Research Institute
Colorful Masterpiece
February 8th, 2016
The magnificent masterpiece shows the Orion nebula in an explosion of infrared, ultraviolet and visible-light colors. It was "painted" by hundreds of baby stars on a canvas of gas and dust, with intense ultraviolet light and strong stellar winds as brushes.
At the heart of the artwork is a set of four monstrously massive stars, collectively called the Trapezium. These behemoths are approximately 100,000 times brighter than our sun. Their community can be identified as the yellow smudge near the center of the composite.
The swirls of green were revealed by Hubble's ultraviolet and visible-light detectors. They are hydrogen and sulfur gases heated by intense ultraviolet radiation from the Trapezium's stars.
Wisps of red, also detected by Spitzer, indicate infrared light from illuminated clouds containing carbon-rich molecules called polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons. On Earth, polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons are found on burnt toast and in automobile exhaust.
Additional stars in Orion are sprinkled throughout the image in a rainbow of colors. Spitzer exposed infant stars deeply embedded in a cocoon of dust and gas (orange-yellow dots). Hubble found less embedded stars (specks of green) and stars in the foreground (blue). Stellar winds from clusters of newborn stars scattered throughout the cloud etched all of the well-defined ridges and cavities.
This image is a false-color composite, in which light detected at wavelengths of 0.43, 0.50, and 0.53 microns is blue. Light with wavelengths of 0.6, 0.65, and 0.91 microns is green. Light of 3.6 microns is orange, and 8-micron light is red.
Credit: NASA, ESA, T. Megeath (University of Toledo) and M. Robberto (STScI)
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