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  • Celestial Tour: Dark Constellations

    Painting of the night sky. Text in the top left corner reads "Painting of the Inca view of the night sky, Cusco, Peru." Text at bottom reads "For the Incas, the band of the Milky Way was the celestial river, Mayu, the source of Earth's water."
  • Celestial Tour: Coronagraph

    Top half portion shows a diagram of a coronagraph with labels. Text appears in the lower half.
  • Myth vs Reality: Our Knowledge of the Solar System

    A simple chart with two columns, each with a header image: a mythical drawing on the left and an artist's concept of Jupiter and Saturn on the right. The "Myth vs. Reality" logo appears toward the chart's top, with "Myth" positioned at the top of the left column, and "Reality" positioned at the top of the right column. Both columns have text.
  • Myth vs Reality: Observing Change in the Solar System

    A simple chart with two columns, each with a header image: a mythical drawing on the left and an artist's concept of Jupiter and Saturn on the right. The "Myth vs. Reality" logo appears toward the chart's top, with "Myth" positioned at the top of the left column, and "Reality" positioned at the top of the right column. Both columns have text.
  • At a Glance: Seasons in the Solar System

    Image of a portion of Earth. Text toward the right reads "Earth has seasons."
  • Celestial Tour: Our Stormy Solar System

    Satellite image of storms on Earth. Text toward the top left reads "On Earth, large storms can be forces of destruction and terror."
  • Above and Beyond: A Hurricane on Saturn

    Storm whirling around Saturn's north pole. Text in the bottom left reads "The eye of this hurricane is over a thousand miles across — 20 times larger than the average hurricane eye on Earth."
  • Above and Beyond: The Sun

    Telescope image of the Sun.
  • Above and Beyond: Jupiter’s Moon Io

    Image of a volcano on Jupiter's moon Io. Text at bottom reads "As NASA's New Horizons spacecraft passed Jupiter in 2007, it caught one of Io's volcanoes spewing a plume of material."
  • Above and Beyond: Neptune’s Clouds

    Image of Neptune's clouds. Text in the top left corner reads "Neptune." In the top right corner, text reads "Artist Composite of Hubble Observations." Text at bottom reads "Neptune was experiencing a rash of clouds when the Hubble Space Telescope turned its attention to the distant planet in June 2011."
  • Insight Into: Impact Scars on Jupiter

    Artist's concept of a laptop, a man, and a telescope pointing toward stars.
  • In a Different Light: The Eagle Nebula

    Framed image of the Eagle Nebula. Text at top reads "In a Different Light, The Eagle Nebula." Text appears at the bottom of the image.
  • Did You Know: Dark Matter

    At left is an image of a field of galaxies with graphic overlays highlighting areas where the light is distorted. In the top right corner is the "Did You Know?" logo. Just below is a yellow box with text that reads "Dark matter does not cast shadows." More text appears below.
  • Celestial Tour: Shadow of the Moon

    Image of Earth against the black background of space. Text at left reads "The warped fabric of space that Einstein described is revealed by the shadow of the Moon."
  • Celestial Tour: Impact Craters—Footprints in Time

    Satellite image of two lakes filling impact craters. Text in the bottom right corner reads "Clearwater Lakes, Canada."
  • Celestial Tour: Death of a Comet

    At left, a small, blurry image of a comet is toward the bottom. Text appears above the comet image. At right is an image of a tapestry depicting a comet.
  • Celestial Tour: A Celestial Light Echo

    Image of V838 Monocerotis at right. On the left is a panel that shows a smaller image of V838 Monocerotis. Text above and below the image reads "The arriving light revealed shells of dust farther out from the star...causing the illusion that the clouds are moving away from the star at faster than light speed! (In fact, the clouds may be hardly moving at all.)"
  • Myth vs Reality: Empty Space

    A simple chart with two columns, each with a header image: a mythical drawing on the left and an image of the Carina Nebula on the right. The "Myth vs. Reality" logo appears toward the chart's top, with "Myth" positioned at the top of the left column, and "Reality" positioned at the top of the right column. Both columns have text.
  • Myth vs Reality: Seeing with Webb vs Seeing with Hubble

    Screen grab from video. A simple chart with two columns, each with a header image: a mythical drawing on the left and an image of the Carina Nebula on the right. The "Myth vs. Reality" logo appears toward the chart's top, with "Myth" positioned at the top of the left column, and "Reality" positioned at the top of the right column. Under Myth, text reads, The James Webb Space Telescope is an improved version of the Hubble Space Telescope.
  • At a Glance: Seeing the Invisible—Using Infrared to See Dust

    Image of the Andromeda Galaxy. Text in the top right corner reads "Andromeda Galaxy." A red box to the right has text that reads "Infrared Light." Text toward the center right reads "How does this work?"

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Disclaimer

ViewSpace video content contains copyrighted material and should not be downloaded or used outside of this website.

This product is based upon work supported by NASA under award numbers NNX16AC65A and NNX15AB26G and contracts NAS5-26555 and NAS5-03127. Any opinions, findings, and conclusions or recommendations expressed in this material are those of the author(s) and do not necessarily reflect the views of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration.