

At each Olympics, the emotions and spectacles of the games produce some incredible images.
The reasons the Olympics enthrall viewers — the atmosphere, the joy of winning, the agony of defeat, the spectacle of sport — are the same reasons they produce some of the best photos.
The Winter Olympics are underway, and although we're only a few days in, already photographers have captured some stunning images from the games in Pyeongchang, South Korea.
Though there's too many great photos to count, we used Getty to compile some of our favorites so far.
Take a look below.
Figure skating is an exhausting sport, both physically and emotionally.
But when you get a gold medal, it's all worth it.
Lydia Lassila of Australia floats upside down, as freestyle skiers do.
Dramatic angles show how daunting the snowboard slopestyle is.
Winning the slopestyle can be rewarding, as it was for Red Gerard.
Read more: 17-year-old Red Gerard wins the US's first gold medal of the Winter Olympics
The North Korean cheer squad had been one of the great spectacles of the Olympics.
Pita Taufatofua is back — and he's still shirtless!
Hockey can be chaotic.
The luge is one of the loneliest sports.
Yet Johannes Ludwig of Germany showed how rewarding the luge is after winning bronze.
When you're winning gold like Mikaela Shiffrin, it's easy to smile.
Read more: Mikaela Shiffrin wins her first gold of the Winter Olympics — and she's got more to come
Italy's Dominik Windisch let it all out after taking home a bronze medal in the mixed biathlon event.
Maddie Bowman of the U.S. reacts to a crash in the freestyle skiing halfpipe.
Have you heard it's cold in Pyeongchang?
The conditions have made events like the biathlon even more difficult.
Read more: The windy conditions at Pyeongchang are wreaking havoc on the Olympics
It's a long way down for alpine skiers, but it's a beautiful ride.
Austria's Anna Gasser takes in a view of wind turbines during the big air qualification.
Falling hurts, as Japan's Sho Endo learned.
Crashes are a common sight in speed skating.
And they can be intense...
Snowboard cross can also get quite crowded as athletes race to the bottom.
Pure emotion from Mirai Nagasu after becoming the first American woman to land a triple axel at the Olympics.
Curling is a game of skill and concentration — and it's not that easy.
Read more: Olympic curlers are pushing back on the most commonly held belief about their sport — that it's easy
Canadian and German bobsledders react to tying for a gold medal.
The 15km biathlon came down to an incredible photo finish.
And both men collapsed afterward.
The final sprint of a cross-country race is one of the most grueling stretches you'll find at the Winter Olympics.
Many racers wind up collapsing just after crossing the finish line.
But when you win the gold medal, you wind up getting your energy back pretty quickly.
The joint Korean hockey team is organized.
A sense of what ski jumpers see as they launch into the air.
We could look at ski jumping photos all day.
Canada's Elizabeth Hosking climbs the halfpipe.
Barrett Martineau of Canada rides ferociously down the track on his sled.
How do they do this?!
You have to appreciate the theatrics of the free dance.
Adam Rippon spins so fast that only his flashy costume sticks out.
Ester Ledecka wasn't sure how to react when she won a surprise gold in the super-G.
Snowboarders get serious air.
Poland's Maciej Kurowski gets dangerously close to the wall in the luge.
The Netherlands women's short track team took home a surprise bronze medal in a race in which they didn't compete after a wild finish.
There's nothing like winning.
But everyone appreciates good sportsmanship.
This is what the Olympics are all about...
Read more: Several cross-country skiers waited at the finish line to congratulate the guy who came in last
Now, check out photos from the very first Winter Olympics...
Incredible photos of the small French commune that held the first Winter Olympics >
At each Olympics, the emotions and spectacles of the games produce some incredible images. Read Full Story
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