Explore Stunning Photos from NASA’s Recent Spacewalk

Explore Stunning Photos from NASA’s Recent Spacewalk

Filmogaz.com reports NASA has published a portfolio of striking images from a recent spacewalk outside the International Space Station. The stunning photos show astronauts working on external hardware and the station’s solar arrays.

Spacewalk overview

The outing took place on March 18, 2026. It lasted seven hours and two minutes.

This excursion was recorded as U.S. spacewalk 94. It was the 278th spacewalk supporting station assembly, maintenance, and upgrades.

Mission objectives

Astronauts Jessica Meir and Chris Williams exited the ISS through the Quest airlock. They prepared the 2A power channel for future roll-out solar arrays, known as IROSA.

The pair built and installed a modification kit and deployed a bracket to hold a new solar array. The work readies the segment for upcoming power augmentations.

Crew milestones

For Jessica Meir, this marked her fourth career spacewalk. For Chris Williams, it was his first time working outside the station.

Meir and Williams performed the tasks as a team. Their work continues efforts to extend ISS power capacity.

Photography and imagery

Images were captured with high-end Nikon cameras and lenses. Photographers used a Nikon Z9 with a 50–500mm f/4.5–6.3 lens and a Nikon D5 with a fixed 28mm f/2.8 lens.

Photo credits include NASA, Jessica Meir, Chris Williams, and Jack Hathaway. A separate satellite image also captured the station while the astronauts were in open space.

Visual highlights

  • Close-ups of the roll-out solar array modification kit.
  • Portrait-style shots of Meir and Williams outside the station.
  • Downward views along pairs of roll-out solar arrays.
  • A wide satellite image showing the ISS with the two crew members outside.

Crew perspective and significance

Meir described the experience as a privilege on social media. She noted the moment was meaningful because she shared it with a first-time spacewalker.

She framed the activity as passing the torch to the next generation of explorers. The work will help keep the station operational for future research.

Availability and access

NASA has made the images available to the public. Readers can view the stunning photos from the recent spacewalk through NASA’s image galleries.

Filmogaz.com will continue to follow updates on station upgrades and imagery releases.