לאמיר ארויסקוקן פון פענסטער אויפן ספעיס סטעישן

LOW EARTH ORBIT — There’s no view on Earth quite like it. Sitting by a window on the International Space Station (ISS) offers astronauts a perspective few humans will ever experience — and it truly hits different.
From this vantage point, sunrises and sunsets happen every 90 minutes, the auroras dance across polar skies, and storms swirl silently over oceans thousands of miles below. Through the iconic Cupola module, astronauts often share breathtaking images of Earth, revealing a planet that seems at once vast and fragile.
More than just a window, it’s a portal to reflection, science, and wonder. Crew members report that gazing back at Earth fosters a powerful sense of unity and perspective — known as the “overview effect” — a shift in awareness that makes geopolitical boundaries disappear and emphasizes our shared responsibility to protect our home planet.
“Looking out the window,” one astronaut said, “you realize just how small we are — and how connected everything truly is.”
As private spaceflight expands and more civilians venture beyond the atmosphere, the space station window seat may become the most coveted spot off Earth — not just for the view, but for the mindset it inspires.
גאלערי
ווידעאס