photo: Creative Commons / JDrewes
Close-up of an image displayed on a Dell 1907FP TFT Flatscreen (19 Inch). The source image being displayed on the fotographed screen has been uploaded as Image:TFT-Pixel-Demo-Image-200x150.png.
photo: Creative Commons / Alvesgaspar
Pocket stereoscope with original test image. Used by military to examine stereoscopic pairs of vertical aerial photographs.
photo: Creative Commons
Photograph of participants of the first Solvay Conference, in 1911, Brussels, Belgium, Getty Images
photo: Creative Commons
God the Father painting the Virgin of Guadalupe, an unusual Marian image, 18th century.
photo: NASA/ESA/ASI
2005/01/22 Phoebe in 3D Phoebe´s violent, cratered past is more evident in this 3D image of Saturn´s tiny moon. This 3D view uses two images taken by the NASA/ESA/ASI Cassini-Huygens spacecraft narrow-angle camera on 11 June 2004. The &acu;
photo: NASA/JPL/Space Science Institute
2005/01/22 Titan close-ups These images, taken during Cassini-Huygens first close flyby of Titan, show details never before seen on Titan´s mysterious surface. The large, bottom image shows a complex interplay between dark and bright material on
photo: Public Domain / Matt57
Digital camera
photo: Creative Commons / Digital photography
A handheld digital camera, Canon Ixus class
photo: Nasa
PIA05093: Penny for Your Reference (Nasa) KLeo
photo: Creative Commons / 3dnatureguy.
Narrow paired images for cross viewing two separate images are printed side-by-side. When viewed without a stereoscopic viewer the user is required to force his eyes either to cross, or to diverge, so that the two images appear to be three.
photo: GFDL / Wagaung
Pindaya Caves
photo: Creative Commons / Carey Akin
WikiProjectAmericanOpenWheelRacingPicJune2007
photo: NASA/JPL/Caltech file
2003/03/11 Sojourner´s First Images From Mars - These images are views of the Mars Pathfinder Lander´s forward ramp before (top image) and after (bottom image) deployment. Some data from the before image was lost due to rover-lander communicat
photo: Creative Commons / Heinz-Josef Lücking
Plasterwork in Pompeii (79 AD).
photo: NASA/JPL-Caltech/Univ. of Arizona
File - This image of the Centauri-Hellas Montes region was taken by the Compact Reconnaissance Imaging Spectrometer for Mars (CRISM) at a portion of a trough in the Nili Fossae region of Mars is shown in enhanced color in this image from the High Resolution Imaging Science Experiment (HiRISE) camera on NASA's Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter
photo: NASA/JPL-Caltech file
1999/04/15 Space Radar Image of Houston, Texas - This image of Houston, Texas, shows the amount of detail that is possible to obtain using spaceborne radar imaging. Images such as this -- obtained by the Spaceborne Imaging Radar-C/X-band Synthetic Apertur
photo: NASA/JPL-Caltech file
1999/10/25 Highest Resolution Image Ever Obtained of Io - Click on this image for a full resolution context image (in tiff format) that corresponds to the caption below. Click here for a jpeg format image. The highest resolution image ever of Jupi
photo: Creative Commons / Magnus Manske
Olympus E-420 Four Thirds entry-level DSLR.
photo: NASA/JPL/Space Science Institute
2005/01/22 The Huygens ´touchdown´ site Shown here are two images of the expected ´touchdown´ site of ESA´s Huygens probe (latitude 10.6 deg S, longitude 191 deg W). At right is a wide-angle image showing most of Titan&acut;
photo: Public Domain / Jeff Schmaltz,
Hindu Kush satellite image
photo: Creative Commons
Before and after radar images of a landslide on Venus. In the center of the image on the right, the new landslide, a bright, flow-like area
photo: Nasa Photo
Dice Imager Chip Sensor (Nasa Photo) KLeo
photo: NASA
Typhoon image was captured by the Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS) on the Aqua satellite
photo: Creative Commons / Wagaung
Mahamuni Buddha Temple
photo: Creative Commons / ESO/A.-M. Lagrange et al.
Beta Pictoris system annotated
photo: Nasa Photo
Dice Imager Chip Sensor is Fingertip Small (Nasa Photo) KLeo
photo: NASA/JPL/Space Science Institute
2005/01/22 Titan in false colour, seen during close fly-by This image shows Titan in ultraviolet and infrared wavelengths. It was taken by the Cassini-Huygens Imaging Science Subsystem on 26 October 2004, and is constructed from four images acquired thr
photo: NASA/JPL/Space Science Institute
2005/01/22 Groovy Rings and Moons The multitude of grooves for which Saturn´s rings are famed, clumps in the F ring, and three Saturnian moons are visible in this image. Moons visible in the image are: Mimas (398 kilometres across) above the rings
photo: Creative Commons / GDK
Artist's concept of the Dawn Mission spacecraft with Vesta (left) and Ceres (right)
photo: Creative Commons / Earthsound
HiRISE image of the 'face' at Cydonia Mesa Red color images are 20,264 pixels across (6 km wide), and B-G and NIR are 4,048 pixels across (1.2 km wide).