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There’s a lot happening in this photo. Scott Kelly is wearing a pressurized spacesuit. He’s floating outside of the International Space Station, which is traveling at over 17,000 miles per hour. He’s attached to it by only a cord. And the best part: He’s taking a selfie.

Kelly, along with NASA flight engineer Kjell Lindgren, conducted his first-ever spacewalk on Wednesday. They spent seven hours performing maintenance work on the orbital station with the help of mission control advisers back on Earth.

I would argue that this photo breaks the record for most people included in a single selfie: Kelly, and the millions of people living on that tiny bit of Earth reflected in his helmet.

Scott Kelly continues to keep us in the dark about what we’re looking at in many of his photos from space. But who am I, an Earth-bound human, to complain?

Here is somewhere in the United States, which many users say resembles an elephant:

#USA #EarthArt #YearInSpace

A photo posted by Scott Kelly (@stationcdrkelly) on


🐘

It's been a while... #montana #instadaily

A photo posted by The Jefferson Grid (@the.jefferson.grid) on

It’s no Taylor Swift corn maze, but this crop area in Pray, Montana, looks rather musical. One Instagram user says it resembles a turntable. Another says it looks like shattered vinyl. What do you think?

Update from a reader in Iowa:

What you are looking at is a center pivot irrigator watering a feed crop such as alfalfa. The harvesting crew is visible at about 2 o’clock on the outer rim of the circle. They have worked their way around the wheel ruts of the center pivot, the center pivot itself (the tone arm), and the drainage that runs through the northern section of the field which is most likely to rough to harvest. My guess is that animals will be turned out to graze that part of the field.

The crop is cut and laid out in windrows to dry prior to being baled on a second pass through the field. The rhomboid field on the top right is fully cut and ready for baling. This nutrient-rich animal feed supplements the very sparse ground cover and allows farmers and ranchers to carry many more animals per acre than the climate would naturally allow.

In case you are really interested in center pivot irrigators:

The technology is getting pretty advanced. There are smartphone apps that allow farmers to monitor their fields for both operation of the irrigators (is a sprinkler not working) and also for the moisture content on the ground.  Unfortunately, it is still novel enough that any chance they get (at least the ones I know) they will show it to you. Almost as boring as watching someone play Tetris.

Proud to wear the red, white and blue!

A photo posted by Kjell Lindgren (@astro_kjell) on

Scott Kelly is quickly becoming America’s Chris Hadfield. Like the Canadian astronaut, Kelly has built quite the following on social media, thanks mostly to his ridiculously beautiful photos of Earth (which Notes can’t stop fangirling over). But there’s another American in space right now, and he’s got some pretty sick shots of our home planet, too.

Kjell Lindgren, a native of Taiwan who grew up in England and the American Midwest, arrived at the International Space Station in July. He’s back next month. The flight engineer is board-certified in emergency and aerospace medicine, according to NASA.

This is Lindgren’s first spaceflight. He seems to be a big fan of water:

The story of #water. Gradients of color, dynamics of flow. Simple but beautiful.

A photo posted by Kjell Lindgren (@astro_kjell) on

A gorgeous glacier fed lake.

A photo posted by Kjell Lindgren (@astro_kjell) on

A reservoir in South Dakota. The story of #water.

A photo posted by Kjell Lindgren (@astro_kjell) on

He seems to be one-upping his fellow NASA astronaut in at least one respect: Telling viewers exactly what they’re looking at, which Kelly doesn’t often do.

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