PIX4625712: Saturn - Illustration - Saturn - Illustration - Artist's view of the planet Saturn. The ring system is composed from the closest to Saturn to the furthest by ring D, then C, B, the division of Cassini, A with the division of Encke, F, G and E. The brightest part of the rings is ring B. This image suggests how Saturn might look from high above the ring plane and at a right angle to the Sun, a perspective that we could never get from the Earth nor from the Hubble Space Telescope / Bridgeman Images
PIX4655209: Mauna Kea Observatory. Radiotelescopes - Radiotelescopes at Mauna Kea Observatory - View of the Mauna Kea Observatory located 4200 metres above sea level in Hawaii, USA. Here, the radiotelescopes with in the foreground the CSO (Caltech Submillimeter Observatory), then the JCMT (James Clerk Maxwell Telescope) and the SMA antenna network (Sub - Millimeter Array). Foreground is CSO (Caltech Submillimeter Observatory), then, JCMT (James Clerk Maxwell Telescope) and background is the antennas network SMA (Sub - Millimeter Array) / Bridgeman Images
PIX4650532: LHC: Installation of the ATLAS calorimeter - LHC: Installing the ATLAS calorimeter - Central view of the ATLAS detector with its eight toroid magnets surrounding the calorimeter before it is moved to the center of the detector. The calorimeter measures the energy of the particles produced during the collision between the protons in the center of the detector. The eight toroid magnets can be seen surrounding the calorimeter that is later moved into the middle of the detector. This calorimeter will measure the energies of particles produced when protons collide in the centre of the detector / Bridgeman Images
PIX4669572: A ring of rocks and dust is orbiting the Earth. The massive continent below is Pangee and the ocean to the west is Panthalassa. This is what Earth was supposed to look like at the end of Permian, about 260 million years ago, before the first dinosaurs appeared. This ring around the Earth was of earthly origin, constitutes debris thrown into orbit by collision with a meteorite or comet. Over time, these debris have fallen or fallen to Earth in a meteorite rain - A dusty ring arc orbits four thousand miles above Earth's equator. The massive continent below is Pangea and the ocean to the west is Panthalassa. This is how the Earth may have appeared during the end of the Permian period, a time just prior to the appearance of the dinosaurs, when continental drift was pulling Pangea apart into the seven continents we know today - 260 million years ago the Earth may have been host to ring arcs similar to the incomplete rings that currently circumscribe the planet Neptune . Unlike Neptune's rings, the ring arcs around the Earth were of terrestrial origin, debris thrown into orbit by a collision with a large meteorite or comet. The debris consisted of tiny pebbles that were once molten droplets of ejecta, long since cooled in the vacuum of space. The orbit of the ring arc would eventually decay, returning the debris back to Earth as a shower of meteorites. This debris is found on Earth's surface today in the form of dark, glassy objects known as tektites.: La Terre à la fin du Permien - Ring arcs over the Permian Earth / Bridgeman Images
SEI4303512: Social Movements of May 68: Demonstration of writers Philippe Sollers (born 1936), Marcelin Pleynet (born 1933), Jean Thibaudeau (born 1935), Eugene Guillevic (1907-1997), philosopher Gilles Deleuze (1925-1995) and poet and mathematician Jacques Roubaud (born 1932). Photograph of 1968. / Bridgeman Images
YOU4418864: The lantern tower on the terraces of the Chateau de Chambord, French civil architecture Renaissance style, construction dating back to the 16th century, having as its function the natural lighting of the double-revolution staircase, it bears in its upper part the emblem of Francois 1st, carved salamanders and ends with a carved flower of lilies at the top, marking the culmination of the building and thus symbolizing the royal power. Photography, KIM Youngtae, Chateau de Chambord (Chateau de la Loire), Chambord, Loir et Cher, Centre. / Bridgeman Images
YOU4419041: Facade of the City Hall of Paris, French civil architecture neo-renaissance style, Built between 1533 and 1590 on the plan of architect Dominique de Cortone, known as Boccador (1465-1549), at the location of Maison aux Pillars, headquarters of the Corps de Ville de Paris installed on Place de Greve since 1357, the current building is a reconstruction of the end of the 19th century by architects Theodore Ballu (1817-1885) and Edouard Deperthes (1833-1898), whose facade recalls that of the previous building fire in 1871 under the Commune. Photography, KIM Youngtae, Paris. / Bridgeman Images
YOU4419141: View of the Pantheon in Paris, French religious architecture in neoclassical style, church built on the Sainte Genevieve mountain in Paris, between 1758 and 1790 by architects Jacques Germain Soufflot (1713-1780), Jean Baptiste Rondelet (1743-1829) to house the hunt of Sainte Genevieve. personalites who contributed to the greatness of France. Photography, KIM Youngtae, Paris. / Bridgeman Images