Explore NASA's vast collection of space images, videos, and audio from missions past and present.
NASA's Image and Video Library is one of the most comprehensive public archives of space imagery in the world, containing over 140,000 images, videos, and audio recordings spanning more than six decades of space exploration. From the earliest Mercury and Gemini missions through the Apollo Moon landings, the Space Shuttle era, and today's cutting-edge observations from the James Webb Space Telescope, this collection documents humanity's journey into the cosmos.
The library includes imagery from diverse sources: telescopes like Hubble and Webb that capture deep-space nebulae, galaxies, and exoplanets; planetary missions like the Mars rovers ( browse Mars photos) and Cassini at Saturn; Earth observation satellites ( see EPIC imagery); astronaut photography from the ISS; and documentation of rocket launches, spacecraft assembly, and ground testing. Most NASA images are in the public domain and free to download at full resolution for educational, editorial, and personal use.
Use the search bar above to find specific subjects — try queries like "Apollo 11," "Hubble Deep Field," "Mars surface," or "astronaut EVA." You can also filter by media type (image, video, or audio). For a daily curated experience, visit the Astronomy Picture of the Day.
Showing results for "Johns Hopkins Applied Physics Laboratory"
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The Inner Circle
Cosmic Rays Liberate Neutrons
This image contains the initial, informal names being used by NASA's New Horizons team for the features and regions...
Alice Views Jupiter and Io
Been Up on Abedin Terrace
Say Aloha to Nawahi!
MESSENGER Looks out on a Limb
Flooding Mercury Surface
Looking Toward Mercury Horizon
A Look from LEISA
Wrinkles in the Cloth of Time
A Change of Perspective
Colorful Kertesz in Caloris
Deformation: Discovery
Crater Ejecta and Chains of Secondary Impacts
Wrinkles and More in Goethe
Bright Peaks, Big Crater
Complex Craters
Paramour Rupes in 3-D
Hodgkins in Color
Dark and Explosive?
Blue Degas
Channel Vision
Double Feature