The material collected during the two NASA Mercury research missions: Mariner 10 and Messenger served as the basis for the wallpapers. Some pictures are presented in their original form, others are processed by filters, effects, color correction. The set contains collages, photos from the preparation of the Messenger mission, as well as computer graphics.
All wallpapers are created in high resolution Quad HD (QHD, 2K (2560x1440)), and are compatible with lower resolutions, such as Full HD (FHD (1920x1080)), HD (1280x720).
What the app can do:
• Work offline. Images are uploaded and processed as quickly as your device allows.
• Slide show. In this mode, the wallpaper is scrolled independently with a three-second pause.
• Build a favorite list. A long touch brings up the menu; a single enlargement increases or decreases the picture.
• Clear the background. Returns the desktop view to the original (factory) view.
• Restore the background. Your wallpaper is saved at the time of installing the new image, then at any time you can return them.
• Change the background of the lock screen. (Requires Android version 7.0 or higher.)
• Save file. All wallpapers of the application can be saved especially in the public Picture folder. (New files may not appear in the Gallery immediately.)
• Shuffle wallpaper. A sharp left-right (or right-left) movement mixes all the pictures.
How to use
Just scroll through the wallpapers and select the best ones, you can move them to Favorites, to do this, click on the star at the bottom, or long touch to call the advanced menu. An extended menu is also available in Favorites.
After setting the background, the application is minimized, click the hardware button "Square" or "Circle" (depending on the brand of the smartphone) to display a list of all minimized applications.
To close the application, click the back button.
Access Requirements
Permission to the Internet is required for advertising. To save the wallpaper and restore your background you need access to read the disc.
Rights, Copyright, Thanks
Space images are taken from open source NASA, in particular NASA / Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory / Carnegie Institution of Washington.
Vector badges made by: Yannick , Freepik .