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  • 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?"
  • Celestial Tour: Star Birth and Planet Formation

    Artist's concept of the James Webb Space Telescope in the lower left corner against a field of fuzzy points of light. Text in the top right corner reads "Ground-based image of Barnard 69." A red box to the right has text that reads "Infrared Light." A yellow box toward the top left has text that reads "Webb helps us look for these young stars and planetary nurseries, which glow in infrared light."
  • Above and Beyond: 30 Doradus

    Image of 30 Doradus. Text in the top left corner reads "Hubble image of star cluster in 30 Doradus." Text toward the bottom left reads "Their strong stellar winds sculpt the gas around them and compress it to create new waves of star birth."
  • Above and Beyond: V838 Monocerotis

    Image of V838 Monocerotis. Text toward the top right corner reads "Hubble image of V838 Monocerotis." Text toward the bottom right reads "In 2002, it gave off a flashbulb-like pulse of light that illuminated the shell of dust around it."
  • Insight Into: Cosmic Dust

    Image of brown and red clouds of dust against a star-filled background. Text appears toward the lower right.
  • Above and Beyond: Eta Carinae

    Image of Eta Carinae. Text at bottom reads "Eta Carinae."
  • 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: 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."
  • Myth vs Reality: Star Life Cycle

    A simple chart with two columns, each with a header image: a mythical drawing on the left and an image of stars, gas, and dust 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: 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."
  • Celestial Tour: Birthplace of Destruction—The Orion Trapezium Cluster

    Image of a section of the Orion Nebula. Text toward the left reads "Giving birth to stars is a thankless job."
  • Above and Beyond: Star Cluster NGC 602

    Image of Star Cluster NGC 602. Text toward the top right reads "Potent winds and high-energy radiation let loose by the young stars are eating away at the inner edge of the nebula."
  • Above and Beyond: The Tarantula Nebula

    Image of the Tarantula Nebula. Text at right reads "Their cosmic résumé includes a variety of ridges, pillars, and valleys carved out of the nebula's gas and dust."
  • Above and Beyond: Star Formation in the Whirlpool Galaxy

    Image of the Whirlpool Galaxy. Text in the top right corner reads "As stars form within these nebulae, their strong stellar winds and searing ultraviolet radiation blow away their veils of gas."
  • Above and Beyond: Thackeray’s Globules

    Image of Thackeray's Globules. Text toward the center left reads "These clouds, however, show signs of disruption and breakup — likely side effects of residing near hot, massive stars that have already burst to life."
  • Insight Into: Star Formation

    Artist's concept of a dying star at left and a cloud of dust and gas at right. Text appears toward the lower 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."
  • Above and Beyond: Interacting Galaxies Arp 273

    Image of two interacting galaxies. The larger one is on the left and the smaller one is on the right. Text toward the bottom reads "In the larger galaxy, the outermost spiral arm has been yanked askew." A small Hubble icon is in the bottom left corner. Text in the bottom right corner reads "Hubble Space Telescope. Arp 273."

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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.