We all know Vancouver is out of this world. But what does Vancouver look like when you're off of this world?
NASA, the Canadian Space Agency (CSA) and the European Space Agency (ESA) have published thousands of photos over the years, capturing Earth (and space) in all sorts of situations, including our fair city.
This collection of photos ranges from 1973 () to the .
Some photos are just spectacular and unusual perspectives of Vancouver, like with the back tip of the space shuttle Endeavour cutting through the Salish Sea between the island and the city. More recently the ; a photo was snapped through the ISS's structure, with Vancouver far below.
Natural events have also been captured, from a massive and American coasts in 2006, to a . A photo by astronaut Ricky Arnold from 2018 catches the light reflecting off a very still Salish Sea, the size of a small country.
There are also a couple of photos of with twinkling streetlights marking the photo like a road map (with the ski hills very prominent. One is even taken by .
The city is big in some photos, but in others, the frame really captures a massive area, including the . In one panorama Vancouver is visible, but hardly prominent, as the photo includes pieces of Oregon and Washington states, along with all of Vancouver Island and much of 小蓝视频 until it disappears over the horizon.
And in , almost all of 小蓝视频 fits inside the frame along with Calgary and the Rockies in the foreground. The Columbia watershed can be seen on the left with northern 小蓝视频 on the top, disappearing over the horizon.