NASA's Landsat 8 satellite snapped a stunning top-down view of an "unusually spectacular" Mount Etna eruption. Infrared data makes the volcano's lava river really pop.
On Dec. 27, 2024, NASA's Juno spacecraft swooped by the volcanic world Io. It witnessed a giant eruption.
A stunning composite image, made up of three years' worth of satellite photos, shows the ancient lava of Libya's Haruj volcanic field interspersed with patches of golden sand.
However, you might be surprised to know that Earth is not alone in having volcanoes – in fact, it’s beaten numerically by the ...
And while Earth, of course, has plenty of active volcanoes of its own, eruptions on the Jovian ... provided by the Italian Space Agency, Juno trained its sights on Io's southern hemisphere. The ...
This stunning satellite photo shows one of the world's most famous and potentially dangerous volcanoes, Mount Vesuvius, playing a game of peek-a-boo with an orbiting spacecraft through a strangely ...
A section of kāmahi trees near the volcano's summit is known as the "Goblin ... Related: See all the best images of Earth from space In 2017, the New Zealand government granted Mount Taranaki ...
Kilauea, one of the world's most active volcanoes, has been erupting on and off for nearly two months since it burst to life ...
Mars, our neighboring red planet, possesses some of the most dazzling and extreme geological features within our solar system ...
Detected by the Juno probe's Italian Space Agency’s Jovian Infrared Auroral ... While Io’s surface includes at least 400 volcanoes with varying levels of activity, none even come close to ...
In Tonga, year 2022 already arrived, but explosive eruptions of the Hunga Tonga-Hunga Ha'apai volcano continue since Dec 20, characterized by dark and dense masses of pyroclastic material [read ...