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Welcome to OuterSpacePix!
OuterSpacePix is a website created for Space fans and is home to an astromonically large number of stunning images of space!  From space missions, inspirational views of earth, all the planets, the sun, galaxies and more, you can get it here.  Choose your favorite space subject from the Nav Bar on the left and our software will begin to deliver full-screen, magnificent images right to your desktop!  All of our collections contain dozens and dozens of high resolution photos with captions that explain each image.  Inspirational and educational, these space channels are not to be missed! Best of all, everything is FREE!
nasa, space shuttle program
image from the free Outer Space channel
gamma ray burst, nasa
Gamma Ray Burst from free Outer Space channel.

Once you download a channel, you will automatically receive images on a regular basis until you have all the pictures.  The Outer Space collections are updated regularly with great new images after Shuttle launches and other current space ventures.  Try our free Outer Space by clicking the GET IT NOW! button below, or choose from our extensive selection of other free collections on the Nav Bar.

free Outer Space channel

volcanos
click here to see the Volcanos collection!
eco travel
click here to see the Eco Travel collection!
fighter jets
click here to see all the U.S. Military collections!
In this handout photo provided by NASA, Astronaut Joseph R. Tanner works along the International Space Station's hardware September 12, 2006.
In this artist's impression supplied by the ESO (European Southern Observatory) on April 25, 2007, the planetary system around the red dwarf, Gliese 581, is pictured showing what astronomers believe is the most earth like planet found outside our solar system to date. Using the ESO 3.6-m telescope in Chile, astronomers have uncovered the planet which could have water running on its surface. The planet orbits the faint star Gliese 581, which is 20.5 light-years away in the constellation Libra.
In this handout photo taken at 8:15am, Hurricane Helene is shown southeast of Bermuda September 21, 2006.
Space Shuttle Endeavour sits on launch pad 39-a after being rolled out by the crawler at the Kennedy Space Center on July 11, 2007 in Cape Canaveral, Florida. Shuttle Endeavour is scheduled for launch no earlier than August 7 on a space station assembly and resupply mission.
Space shuttle Atlantis lifts off from launch pad 39-b September 9, 2006 at the Kennedy Space Center in Cape Canaveral, Florida. Atlantis is set to deliver astronauts and a payload to the International Space Station to resume construction that was halted following the Space Shuttle Columbia disaster.
In this handout photo provided by NASA, astronauts Piers J. Sellers (red stripes) and Michael E. Fossum, STS-121 mission specialists, work in tandem on the shuttle's Remote Manipulator System/Orbiter Booster Sensor System (RMS/OBSS) during the mission's first scheduled session of extravehicular activity (EVA) July 8, 2006 in Space. Discovery is scheduled to be docked with the International Space Station until July 14 and return to Florida on July 16.
An interior view of the Apollo 13 Lunar Module and the "mailbox." The "mailbox" was a jerry-rigged arrangement which the Apollo 13 astronauts built to use the Command Module lithium hydroxide canisters to purge carbon dioxide from the Lunar Module. Lithium hydroxide is used to scrub CO2 from the spacecraft atmosphere. Since there was a limited amount of lithium hydroxide in the Lunar Module, this arrangement was rigged up using the canisters from the Command Module. The "mailbox" was designed and tested on the ground at the Manned Spacecraft Center before it was suggested to the problem-plagued Apollo 13 crewmen. Because of the explosion of an oxygen tank in the Service Module, the three astronauts had to use the Lunar Module as a "lifeboat."
February 5, 1971 - A front view of the Apollo 14 Lunar Module "Antares", which reflects a circular flare caused by the brilliant sun. The unusual ball of light was said by the astronauts to have a jewel-like appearance. At extreme left, the lower slope of Cone Crater can be seen.
Crewmen aboard the U.S.S. Iwo Jima, prime recovery ship for the Apollo 13 mission, hoist the Command Module aboard ship. The Apollo 13 crewmen were already aboard the Iwo Jima when this photograph was taken. The Apollo 13 spacecraft splashed down at 12:07:44 p.m., April 17, 1970 in the South Pacific Ocean.
Astronaut Edgar D. Mitchell, lunar module pilot, photographed this sweeping view showing fellow Moon-explorer astronaut Alan B. Shepard Jr., mission commander, and the Apollo 14 Lunar Module (LM). A small cluster of rocks and a few prints made by the lunar overshoes of Mitchell are in the foreground. Mitchell was standing in the boulder field, located just north by northwest of the LM, when he took this picture during the second Apollo 14 extravehicular activity (EVA-2), on February 6, 1971. While astronaut Stuart A. Roosa, command module pilot, remained with the Command and Service Modules (CSM) in lunar orbit, Shepard and Mitchell descended in the LM to explore the Moon.
One of the first steps taken on the Moon, this is an image of Buzz Aldrin's bootprint from the Apollo 11 mission. Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin walked on the Moon on July 20, 1969.
17 April 1970 -- This view of the damaged Apollo 13 Service Module (SM) was photographed from the Lunar Module/Command Module following SM jettisoning. As seen here, an entire SM panel was blown away by the apparent explosion of oxygen tank number two located in Sector 4 of the SM. Two of the three fuel cells are visible just forward (above) the heavily damaged area. Three fuel cells, two oxygen tanks, and two hydrogen tanks are located in Sector 4. The damaged area is located above the S-Band high gain antenna. Nearest the camera is the Service Propulsion System (SPS) engine and nozzle. The damage to the SM caused the Apollo 13 crewmen to use the Lunar Module (LM) as a "lifeboat." The Lunar Module "Aquarius" was jettisoned just prior to Earth reentry by the Command Module "Odyssey".
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