Instructional Video8:22
Science360

Research gov Site Demonstration Part 1 Public Services

12th - Higher Ed
Research gov is an exciting initiative that enables organizations and researchers to access streamlined research grants management services and other resources for multiple federal agencies in one location. This video provides an...
Instructional Video10:00
Astrum

Are we sending microbes to alien worlds? Panspermia

Higher Ed
With all the focus on the Coronavirus, it made me wonder how viruses would cope in space generally. This led on to other questions like "do we contaminate other worlds with Earth based life?" and "can alien bacteria and viruses thrive...
Instructional Video6:21
Astrum

Why is space black?

Higher Ed
Olber's Paradox. With so many stars in the universe, why is space black and not white with light?
Instructional Video1:09
Next Animation Studio

New study suggests Pluto started out with a liquid ocean

12th - Higher Ed
New research published in the journal Nature Geoscience suggests Pluto started out with a liquid ocean that has been slowly freezing over time.
Instructional Video15:58
Astrum

Our Solar System's Planets: Saturn

Higher Ed
Everything you could want to know about Saturn!
Instructional Video1:50
Next Animation Studio

The technology and ideas required to replicate the movie Dune

12th - Higher Ed
The success of the new Dune movie has people speculating about whether humans changing Mars’s surface and atmosphere to be more like Earth’s. But is it possible?
Instructional Video6:03
Physics Girl

How We’ll Find the Aliens in Our Solar System! | STELLAR

9th - 12th
I got to visit two awesome upcoming NASA missions searching for life in our solar system! The Mars 2020 rover mission targeting the Jezero Crater and the Europa Clipper reconnaissance mission to explore one of Jupiter's moons due to...
Instructional Video7:33
Dom Burgess

Should We Send Animals to Mars?

9th - 11th
Animals have been used in aeronautical exploration since the dawn of flight, from sending sheep up in hot air balloons to launching chimpanzees into space. But as science advances, do we still need to use them? Should we send animals to...
Instructional Video0:53
Next Animation Studio

Voyager probe reaches outer limits of the solar system

12th - Higher Ed
NASA's Voyager 1 spacecraft officially is the first human-made object to venture into interstellar space. This animation details its journey from earth to the outer limits of the solar system.
Podcast8:58
NASA

‎The Invisible Network: Bonus - LCRD: Your Questions Answered | NASA’s The Invisible Network Podcast

Pre-K - Higher Ed
In this bonus episode of NASA's The Invisible Network podcast, NASA subject matter experts answer questions about the Laser Communications Relay Demonstration (LCRD) submitted on social media.
Instructional Video0:30
Next Animation Studio

Unique' neutron star system's activity captured by NASA

12th - Higher Ed
In October 2010, a neutron star near the center of the Milky Way emitted hundreds of X-ray bursts triggered by thermonuclear explosions on the star's surface. NASA's Rossi X-ray Timing Explorer, or RXTE, observed some 400 such events...
Instructional Video0:50
Next Animation Studio

NASA discovers three things that impact Earth's spin

12th - Higher Ed
There are three reasons why our planet wobbles: glacial rebound, melting of ice, and mantle convection, according to a study published in the journal Earth and Planetary Science Letters.
Podcast14:30
NASA

‎NASA in Silicon Valley: Podcast Archive 2009: NASA’s Kepler Mission to Look for Earth-like Planets

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Originally aired on February 27, 2009, a conversation on the Kepler Mission with Principal Investigator William Borucki, Deputy Principal Investigator David Koch, and Kepler Science Council Member Alan Boss from the Carnegie Institute of...
Podcast22:09
NASA

Gravity Assist: Using Webb to Trace Galactic Histories, with Aaron Yung

Pre-K - Higher Ed
The James Webb Space Telescope, which launched Dec. 25, will allow us to see the farthest galaxies and better understand the origins of the Milky Way. Aaron Yung at NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center is preparing for these historic...
Podcast26:18
NASA

‎Houston We Have a Podcast: Citizen Science on Station

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Sarah Smith, a NASA intern, interviews students who were recently selected to fly their experiments to the International Space Station as part of the program under NASA’s STEM on Station initiative called Student Payload Opportunity with...
Podcast23:59
NASA

‎The Invisible Network: Bonus - Dan Curry | NASA's The Invisible Network Podcast

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Science fiction and science fact have long enjoyed a symbiotic relationship, with ideas in one prompting innovations in the other, and so on. Dan Curry, a filmmaker, artist and visual effects producer best known for his Star Trek work,...
Instructional Video5:02
Science360

Geomagic

12th - Higher Ed
What do space shuttle safety measures and modern shoemaking have in common? Both use a 3-D design and engineering technology that streamlines a wide range of inspection and manufacturing processes. Geomagic is an industry leader in the...
Podcast26:44
NASA

‎NASA in Silicon Valley: Edward Montiel & Matthew Richter Talk About Observing Mars, Venus And More From Earth's Stratosphere

Pre-K - Higher Ed
A conversation about NASA’s Stratospheric Observatory for Infrared Astronomy (SOFIA) and the Echelon-Cross-Echelle Spectrograph (EXES) science instrument with Matthew Richter, Principle Investigator, and Edward Montiel, Postdoctoral...
Instructional Video10:28
Astrum

Our Solar System's Planets: Mercury

Higher Ed
Almost everything you could want to know about the closest planet to the Sun, Mercury. Real HD photos and videos taken by the MESSENGER probe. We discuss the orbit, climate, geographical features, and general physical characteristics or...
Instructional Video13:11
The Viral Fever

Cosmic Journeys: Greenland's Melting Ice

12th - Higher Ed
This video explores the significance of Greenland's massive inland ice sheet and how it serves as a laboratory for studying the history of our planet. Scientists are studying the ice sheet to understand how quickly it's melting and how...
Instructional Video11:09
Astrum

Why NASA wants to build a space station around the Moon | NASA Gateway, SLS and Artemis

Higher Ed
Gateway is NASA's most ambitious project yet, so how to they plan to get a space station around the Moon? And why have one there in the first place? SLS, Artemis and Gateway.
Instructional Video10:59
Journey to the Microcosmos

Mysterious Jiggly Crystals and Other Intracellular Structures

9th - Higher Ed
Let's journey deep into the cells themselves to take a look at some of the structures that keep cells alive and others that do... something... that we'll figure out someday... probably.
Instructional Video5:38
NASA

NASA | Earth Science Week: Keeping Up With Carbon

3rd - 11th
"Keeping Up With Carbon" is the final episode in the six-part series "Tides of Change", exploring amazing NASA ocean science to celebrate Earth Science Week 2009. Carbon is all around us. This unique atom is the basic building block of...
Instructional Video2:13
Next Animation Studio

Astronomers discover the seven Earth-size TRAPPIST-1 planets may be made of similar stuff

12th - Higher Ed
A new international study has measured the densities of the seven Earth-size planets around TRAPPIST-1 with extreme precision