Fancy visiting an alien world? Well, Mars, one of our closest celestial neighbours, is roughly a staggering 225 million kilometres away from Earth – a journey that would take you over 1,000 years to walk.
But don’t go reaching for your space boots just yet: there’s plenty on planet Earth that looks truly Martian. At least, that’s what we can tell from the winner of this year’s Royal Society Publishing Photography Competition. While it looks like a picture of extra-terrestrial plants, it actually shows a cluster of smile moulds growing in a leafy garden in the United Kingdom (see image below).
But it’s not the only staggering photo in this collection, which documents strange scientific phenomena. Scroll down below to see a real-life crystal forest, a temporal crack, and a jellyfish elevator.
Ecology category runner-up – Post-war chamois
Microimaging category runner-up – Beacon of crystals in a wild forest
Astronomy category winner – The western veil nebula
Earth science category runner-up – A crack in time
Ecology category winner – Star of the night
Astronomy category runner-up – Flower Moon on a cloudy night
Behaviour category runner-up – Ssstandoff
Behaviour category winner – Nightly elevator
Earth science category runner-up – Burning through the frozen south
James Cutmore is the picture editor of BBC Science Focus Magazine. He has worked on the magazine and website for over a decade, telling compelling science stories through the use of striking imagery. He holds a degree in Fine Art, and has been nominated for the British Society of Magazine Editors Talent Awards, being highly commended in 2020. His main areas of interest include photography that highlights positive technology and the natural world. For many years he was a judge for the Wellcome Trust's image competition, as well as judging for the Royal Photographic Society.
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