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  • At a Glance: Logging Activity in Washington State

    Satellite image of a forested region. The year "1984" appears in the top left corner. Text toward the left reads "This satellite image shows one region of the forest in 1984."
  • At a Glance: Transits

    Artist's concept of a star overlaid with a transit path. Text toward the bottom reads "Transits can reveal characteristics of the transiting body that are otherwise difficult to observe."
  • At a Glance: Seasons in the Solar System

    Image of a portion of Earth. Text toward the right reads "Earth has seasons."
  • At a Glance: United States at Night

    Image of two bridges at night. Text appears toward the bottom right.
  • 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?"
  • At a Glance: Exploring Alien Atmospheres

    Toward the top are three spectral graphs of Venus, Earth, and Mars. Artist's concepts of the planets appear toward the bottom. Text appears toward the bottom left.
  • At a Glance: The First Galaxies—Observing with the Webb Space Telescope

    A grid-like collage of early galaxies. Text toward the bottom reads "And extremely early galaxies often appear as smallish blobs of stars."
  • At a Glance: Galaxy M101 in Infrared Light

    Two side-by-side images of spiral galaxy M101 as seen in visible light by the Hubble Space Telescope and infrared light as imaged by the Spitzer Space Telescope. A gray box toward the bottom left reads "In visible light, bright stars dominate the view." A gray box toward the bottom right reads "In infrared light, warm dust and gas clouds are more prominent."
  • At a Glance: Exoplanet Detection

    Graphic titled "Using Light to Find Extrasolar Planets, at-a-Glance." The left side shows an artist's concept of the Sun and a chart showing the level of brightness changing. On the right is a yellow box with text.
  • At a Glance: Types of Supernova

    Text at top reads "There's More Than One Way to Destroy a Star, at-a-Glance."  At left is a yellow box with text. On the right is an artist's concept of a white dwarf star.
  • 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."
  • 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."
  • At a Glance: Shapes of Planetary Nebulae

    In the top left corner is text that reads "at-a-Glance." A yellow circle to the left has text that reads "Shapes of Planetary Nebulae." A list of four tabs, each listing a different shape of planetary nebulae, appear further below. Toward the right is an artist's concept of a bipolar planetary nebula. Text appears above the artist's concept.
  • At a Glance: Three Types of Galaxies

    Collage of three galaxy images: a spiral, elliptical, and an irregular galaxy. Text toward the top reads "at-a-Glance, Three Types of Galaxies." Text near the bottom of the irregular galaxy image reads "This mess of stars is known as an irregular galaxy."
  • At a Glance: Space Telescopes vs Ground-based Telescopes

    At left is a labeled artist's concept of the Gran Telescopio Canarias's mirror. A scale appears above it. At right is a labeled image of the Hubble Space Telescope orbiting above Earth. A red box in the top right corner has text that reads "At A Glance." Just below is a blue box with text that reads "One of the largest mirrors in space belongs to the Hubble Space Telescope."
  • 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."
  • At a Glance: Gravitational Lensing

    Image of a galaxy cluster. Text toward the top left reads "A cluster of galaxies can act like a giant lens in space."
  • At a Glance: Galactic Collisions

    Graphic titled "Galactic Collisions, at-a-Glance." The left side shows an artist's concept of a stream of stars and gas. On the right is a yellow box with text.
  • At a Glance: Coral Reefs

    Satellite image of an atoll. Text toward the upper right reads "Atolls act as natural historic markers, encircling the places where now-submerged volcanic islands once stood."
  • At a Glance: Observing Volcanic Activity from Space

    Text at top reads "At a Glance, Observing Volcanic Activity from Space." Below are two artist's concepts of Earth. The version on the left is labeled "Surface Map." The version on the right is labeled "Atmosphere Map." Text at bottom reads "With their perspective from above, satellites have a unique view of changes to Earth's surface and atmosphere."

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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.