NASA Time Lapse: Stunning Video 'Walking On Air' Shows Aurora, City Lights As Seen From ISS (VIDEO)

The Huffington Post Canada  |  Posted: 04/21/2012 3:52 pm Updated: 04/21/2012 4:06 pm

Nasa Timelapse Video
The time lapse video shows the aurora, Comet Lovejoy and city lights at night. (NASA/YouTube)

You've probably seen NASA's breathtaking time-lapse videos before, but now the space agency has added some creative touches.

Set to "Walking in the Air" by Howard Blake, the video pieces together and speeds up some of NASA's most gorgeous time-lapse photography from the International Space Station as shot by the Expedition 30 crew.

Watch as the ISS passes over the Aurora Borealis above Hudson Bay, lightning storms in Africa, a comet's glowing tail and city lights shining from a dark Earth.

Also on HuffPost:

GALLERY: THE EARTH FROM SPACE
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  • Sandy Cay

    This astronaut photograph taken on Nov. 27, 2010, provides a view of tidal flats and channels near Sandy Cay, on the western side of Long Island, and along the eastern margin of the Great Bahama Bank, on the islands of Bahamas. The continuously exposed parts of the island are brown, a result of soil formation and vegetation growth. To the north of Sandy Cay, an off-white tidal flat composed of carbonate sediments is visible; light blue-green regions indicate shallow water on the tidal flat.

  • Lake Nasser

    Egypt's Lake Nasser was photographed in January 2005 from the International Space Station.

  • Sahara Desert

    Tassili n'Ajjer National Park, part of the Sahara Desert, has a bone-dry climate with scant rainfall, yet it doesn't blend in with Saharan dunes. Instead, the rocky plateau rises above the surrounding sand seas. This image from 2000 was made from multiple observations by the Landsat 7 satellite, using a combination of infrared, near-infrared and visible light to better distinguish among the park's various rock types.

  • Hydrogen Sulfide and Dust Plumes on Namibia's Coast

    Cloudless skies allowed a clear view of dust and hydrogen sulfide plumes along the coast of Namibia in early August 2010. Multiple dust plumes blow off the coast toward the ocean, most or all of them probably arising from stream beds. Unlike the reddish-tan sands comprising the dunes directly south of the Kuiseb River, the stream-channel sediments are lighter in color. Wind frequently pushes dust plumes seaward along the Namibian coast.

  • Egypt

    The Nile River and its delta look like a brilliant, long-stemmed flower in this astronaut photograph of the southeastern Mediterranean Sea, as seen from the International Space Station on Oct. 28, 2010. The Cairo metropolitan area forms a particularly bright base of the flower.

  • Islands of Four Mountains

    The snow-capped volcanoes composing the Islands of the Four Mountains in Alaska's Aleutian Island chain look suspiciously like alien worlds in this August 2010 image from the ASTER camera aboard NASA's orbiting Terra satellite.

  • Aurora Australis

    This NASA image shows the aurora australis observed from the International Space Station on May 29, 2010. This aurora image was taken during a geomagnetic storm that was most likely caused by a coronal mass ejection from the sun on May 24.

  • Sarychev Volcano

    Astronauts at the International Space Station captured this striking view of the Sarychev volcano on Russia's Kuril Islands in an early stage of eruption on June 12, 2009. Sarychev Peak is one of the most active volcanoes in the Kuril Islands chain.

  • Arctic Eclipse

    NASA's Terra satellite was rounding the top of the globe -- making its way from the eastern tip of Siberia and across the Arctic Ocean toward northwest Russia -- when it captured this unique view of a total solar eclipse on Aug. 1, 2008. In the area shown in the image, the sun was obscured for about two minutes. As Earth rotated, the shadow moved southeast across the surface. At the same time, the satellite crossed the Arctic with its path nearly perpendicular to the eclipse.

  • Fargo

    The Advanced Land Imager on NASA's Earth Observing-1 satellite shows a snowy blanket over Fargo, N.D., on Dec. 12.

  • Mount Everest

    Astronauts captured this image highlighting the northern entry to Mount Everest from Tibet on Jan. 6. Climbers travel along the East Rongbuk Glacier, shown on the lower left, to camp at the base of Changtse mountain.

  • Island Beauty

    The south end of Eleuthera Island in the Bahamas shimmers in turquoise waters in this 2002 photo from the International Space Station.

  • Massive Sandstorm

    A massive sandstorm sweeps over Qatar as it races south toward southeastern Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates on Feb. 15, 2004. A major upper-level, low-pressure system over southwestern Asia led to a series of storms sweeping through the area. The crew of the International Space Station captured this image with a digital camera using a 50-millimeter lens.

  • Lake Naivasha, Kenya

    Flowers grow year round in sun-drenched Kenya, and nowhere are they more plentiful than Lake Naivasha, shown here. In this view from space, bright white squares mix with fields of green, tan and purple along the shores of the lake. Sunlight glints off the long rows of glass greenhouses, turning them silvery blue and white. Fallow fields are tan and pink, while growing plants turn the ground bright green. Roses, lilies and carnations are the most common flowers grown in the greenhouses and fields scattered around the lake.

  • Cumulonimbus Cloud Over Africa

    High above the African continent, tall, dense cumulonimbus clouds, meaning "cloud heap" in Latin, are the result of atmospheric instability. The clouds can form alone, in clusters or along a cold front in a squall line. The high energy of these storms is associated with heavy precipitation, lightning, high wind speeds and tornadoes. <em>Correction: A previous version of this slide offered an inaccurate translation of "cumulonimbus."</em>

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You've probably seen NASA's breathtaking time-lapse videos before, but now the space agency has added some creative touches. Set to "Walking in the Air" by Howard Blake, the video pieces together a...
You've probably seen NASA's breathtaking time-lapse videos before, but now the space agency has added some creative touches. Set to "Walking in the Air" by Howard Blake, the video pieces together a...
 
 
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future primitive
Voice in the Wilderness
07:50 AM on 04/23/2012
Beautiful. But every time I see one of these my takeaway is the dire need we have for better, more efficient technologies to light our city streets and roadwyas at night. That's a lot of lumens. You can literally see it from space. I'm not just talking about "light pollution" that interferes with ground astronomy. And I acknowledge some of it is reflected from the ground.

But we are all using an enormous amount of finite energy for this. A lot of what is visible from 50 miles above the surface is absolutely being wasted. Some of the technology is already available but we need to be using it and investing in things even more advanced.
01:07 PM on 04/23/2012
No, that IS light pollution, the complete waste of energy going up into the air. A miniscule amount is "reflected from the ground." And, of course, it ruins ground-based astronomy. It also adversely affects wildlife, particularly nesting sea turtles and migrating birds. There has recently been shown to be a direct correlation between over exposure to light at night and the body's inability to make melatonin, which can lead to some forms of cancer. And, most pernicious of all, it's causing us to lose our specie's heritage of dark skies. All this, and it is the EASIEST FORM OF POLLUTION TO CORRECT! Please contact The International Dark Sky Association (www.darksky.org) for more info on what you can do to help!
01:18 PM on 04/23/2012
No, this is entirely about light pollution. And only a miniscule amount of light is "reflected from the ground." We already have more than enough technology to solve this pernicious form of pollution. In fact, light pollution is THE easiest form of pollution to correct, and it's very inexpensive to do so. Simply put shields on bad light fixtures, directing the light downward, where it's needed. This has become so well known a problem that lighting engineers have designed many types of fixtures for use by cities and towns; most use so-called "full cut-off" shielded streetlights now. The problem is the sheer number of lights that are being added each day, month and year all over the world as out population continues to explode in numbers.

Not only is light pollution ruining ground-based astronomical research, but it has detrimental effects on wildlife, particularly endangered nesting sea turtles and migrating birds. There is a direct correlation between overexposure to night lighting and certain forms of cancer (!!!), due to the body's inability to manufacture cancer-fighting melatonin. And, perhaps saddest of all, it's causing us to lose our heritage of dark skies. Millions of people worldwide have never experienced the awe and wonder of a truly dark night sky.

Please contact The International Dark Sky Association (www.darksky.org) to see what you can do to help!
01:21 AM on 04/23/2012
only america own ISS and space shuttle,
no need depend on ussr russia,
dont let ussr russia come in america ISS / space shuttle,
because ussr russia is a big copy / spy / steal alot from america ISS and space shuttle,
time is ban and stop ussr russia
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Carla van der Meer
in scientia opportunatis
01:05 AM on 04/23/2012
Oh, what a beautiful world....
12:06 AM on 04/23/2012
Makes me wonder what our purpose is.
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05:32 AM on 04/23/2012
Good question Seastorm. What is your opinion on purpose for humanity?
11:48 PM on 04/22/2012
To paraphrase from a poem that Alexander Pope wrote about Newton: Nature lay hid in night. God said, Let NASA be, and all was Light.

America's withdrawal from space exploration, and especially manned exploration, would be one of the great tragedies in our history as a nation.
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Gas-Bag
There's nothing endearing about perfection.
12:09 AM on 04/23/2012
I understand the sentiment but it takes so much from a science mission to provide for humans that it (for now) just isn't a wise expenditure of effort. It will come back in time but for now it just isn't practical.

As for the paraphrased poem, perfect.
Al Schrader
Don't limit your potential
08:23 PM on 04/22/2012
If you look closely at these photos, it's not hard to pick-out the circular shapes.
On dry planets and moons, the craters are clearer. The Earth's surface is mostly filled-in with water, but the craters are still there if you look closely. Some of them are not round and are glancing blows like the Great Lakes gouges. Of course these things can be deflected....Al-
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allmywickedsins
Don't be stupid, it might make you famous.
08:04 PM on 04/22/2012
Beautiful video. Makes me wish we took better care of our planet and of each other.
01:22 PM on 04/23/2012
It is beautiful, but remember that a lot of the footage is showing the glowing lights of cities. This is light pollution, plain and simple. Please see my remarks about this terrible problem above.
wwhatever747
Whatever Karma Bites, Let it be, U asked for it.
06:47 PM on 04/22/2012
run for your lives the aliens are coming...
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SarcasticFringehead
Mute Nostril Agony
06:09 PM on 04/22/2012
When you think about it, it took 4.5 billion years to make this video, starting from the beginning of the creation of our solar system.

About a million years ago, proto-humans evolved.

10,000 years ago, human civilization started.

Science, as we would define it, started a few hundred years ago.

And within the last century, science and technology has exploded and the earth has become covered by humans and their constructions.

As philosopher, Allen Watts declared: "The earth has "peopled."
01:24 PM on 04/23/2012
And the most obvious human "construction" in the video is our overabundance of lighting fixtures. All that interesting light is light pollution, an insidious problem that can be easily fixed. Please see my comments above. Thanks!
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liephman88
riding on a pony in a one horse town
05:34 PM on 04/22/2012
If only more people could see just how finite our world is maybe, just maybe we will start to get along and help the whole of mankind survive and live in peace............. We are so screwed!
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vaygollybum
just wondering
05:21 PM on 04/22/2012
WOW!!!!!!!!!!!
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margiebe
Opinions should be based on some rational thought
05:18 PM on 04/22/2012
The planet is beautiful.
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southboundcowboy
Think for your self.
05:50 PM on 04/22/2012
Compare the planet with a human body, both are beautiful, although both are also full of parasite's.
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mcinnisja
Let's just assume you're wrong and drop it...
06:46 PM on 04/22/2012
Parasite's what?
05:15 PM on 04/22/2012
Take a good look because someday soon it will all be gone,,Iran and N.Korea with the help of Hugo Chavev,will see to that
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Gas-Bag
There's nothing endearing about perfection.
11:55 PM on 04/22/2012
Lol. And the super powers will have nothing to do with it ? Seriously blaming the worlds problems on three miniscule nations is childish at best.
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listgirl3
Always remember to tip your ninja.
05:11 PM on 04/22/2012
Truly spectacular!
05:05 PM on 04/22/2012
I'd still love to see the Earth rise from the Moon. I think that is one of the best photos I have seen. I forget which Apollo misson took the photo but I'd still love to sit on the moon and watch Earth.