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  • Cosmic Tour: The Monkey Head Nebula

    At left is text. In the bottom left corner is a blue-green box with text that reads "Cosmic Tour, Monkey Head." At right is an image of the Monkey Head with labeled features. In the bottom right corner is a scale bar.
  • 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."
  • 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.
  • 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: 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.)"
  • Above and Beyond: Celestial Signature—The Sun’s Spectrum

    Absorption spectrum of the Sun. Text at bottom reads "Celestial Signature. The positions of the lines tell us about the star's motion, while the brightness of the colors reflect the star's temperature."
  • Myth vs Reality: Supernova Types

    A simple chart with two columns, each with a header image: a mythical drawing on the left and an image of a supernova 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: Star Life and Death

    A simple chart with two columns, each with a header image: a mythical drawing on the left and an image of stars 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: Star Types

    A simple chart with two columns, each with a header image: a mythical drawing on the left and an image of stars 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: Star Color and Temperature

    Text at top reads "at-a-Glance, The Colorful Ways of Stars." A spectrum bar appears just below, with the left side purple and labeled "Ultraviolet," and the right side red and labeled "Infrared." In the center of the bar is a rainbow-colored portion that is labeled "Visible Light." Below are artist’s concepts of five types of stars. A yellow box in the lower left corner is pointing to the leftmost star and has text that reads "The hottest stars we can see appear blue."
  • Celestial Tour: A Star’s Fight for Life—Star Life Cycles

    Artist's concept of the Sun. Text in the center reads "Astronomers expect it to carry on for another several billion years."
  • Above and Beyond: Stars in our Galaxy, the Milky Way

    Photo of stars in the Milky Way. Text toward the bottom left reads "In a remote location away from city lights, we can see up to a couple thousand stars."
  • Above and Beyond: Star Cluster Omega Centauri

    Image of Star Cluster Omega Centauri. Text at left reads "The red stars are even older, cooler, and bigger."
  • Above and Beyond: Star Cluster Pismis 24

    Image of Star Cluster Pismis 24. Text toward the top right reads "In a nebula 8,000 light-years from Earth resides a small cluster of stars called Pismis 24." Below is a small blue and white graphic of Hubble and text that reads "Hubble Space Telescope." In the bottom right corner is light brown text that reads "Pismis 24."
  • Insight Into: Sizes of Stars

    Artist's concepts of the Sun and Earth. Text appears at top.
  • At a Glance: Types of Nebulae

    Collage of three different nebula types. Each image has a label toward its bottom, from left to right: "planetary nebulae," "supernova remnants," and "star-forming nebulae." Text toward the top reads "at-a-Glance, Different Kinds of Cosmic Clouds." Text near the bottom of the star-forming nebulae image reads "Instead of stellar graveyards, some nebulae are stellar nurseries."
  • Insight Into: Galaxies—Cities of Stars

    Artist's concept of a barred spiral galaxy. Text appears toward the right.
  • Myth vs Reality: What Makes Up Galaxies

    A simple chart with two columns, each with a header image: a mythical drawing on the left and an image of a galaxy 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: Galaxy Structure

    Collage of three galaxy images: a spiral, elliptical, and an irregular galaxy. Text toward the top reads "But the ways these contents are arranged, and the amounts of each, are different for each kind of galaxy."
  • Celestial Tour: Types of Galaxies

    Image of a star cluster. Text toward the left reads "The halo contains enormous and ancient clusters of stars, called globular clusters, for their globe-like shape."

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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.