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Geoengineering

YouthScienceSpaceEnvironment
What is geoengineering, is it really an option and what if it goes wrong?

NASA's Exoplanet Superheroes

YouthFutureSpaceScience...
A superhero team of space telescopes has been working tirelessly to discover exoplanets and unveil their secrets.

The Huge Hexagon-Shaped Storm on Saturn

YouthScienceSpaceAstronomy
The sun is slowly rising over Saturn’s north pole, exposing an immense six-sided hurricane.

How To Find A Galaxy

YouthScienceSpaceAstronomy
Knowing the addresses of a thousand galaxies yielded a remarkable picture of our universe.

The Largest Known Star

YouthSpaceScienceAstronomy
What is the largest star in the Universe? And why is it that large? And what ARE stars anyway?

Are There Rainbows On Mars?

YouthEducationSpaceScience
NASA scientist Mark Lemmon explains why the Red Planet is a rainbowless world.

What Is A Blue Hole?

YouthSpaceScienceNature...
Shark Week expert Luke Tipple explains the natural phenomenon of marine sinkholes.

How Saturn Got Its Rings

YouthScienceSpaceGeology
There's evidence to suggest Saturn didn't have its rings when the dinosaurs inhabited Earth, so how did they form?

Is Everest The Tallest Mountain?

YouthSpaceScienceEducation
It turns out that where you measure from is really important!

Looking For Another Earth

YouthSpaceScienceFuture
In the last few years, scientists have discovered thousands of exoplanets - and a lot of them are surprisingly weird.

Avalanche Dogs Of Mount Bachelor

YouthSpaceAnimalsNature
At Mount Bachelor in Oregon, there's a special unit of workers dedicated just to avalanche rescue—and the training starts young!

What's The Difference Between Asteroids, Comets, And Meteors?

YouthSpaceScienceAstronomy
Asteroids, comets, and meteors: what's the difference?

Tour Of The Galaxy

YouthSpaceScience
Depart Earth’s surface and fly through the solar system to the edge of the Milky Way, discovering objects at increasingly distant locations from Earth.

How Saturn Got Its Rings

YouthSpaceScienceAstronomy
There's evidence to suggest Saturn didn't have its rings when the dinosaurs inhabited Earth, so how did they form?

How Asians Celebrate Lunar New Year Worldwide

YouthSpaceCultureFestivities
Check out some of the most colorful Lunar New Year customs.

Peacock Rangoli

YouthSpaceArtCulture...
Easy & Simple Color Rangoli Designs For Festivals

Limb-Centric Choreography

YouthSpaceDanceDisability...
As part of the farewell ceremony for the 2020 Tokyo Paralympic Games, Sadeck Waff choreographed a beautiful, precise geometric, synchronised work with 128 performers seated in wheelchairs.

Lucy's Journey

YouthSpaceScience
Meet Lucy as she prepares for the first ever journey to the Trojan asteroids, a population of primitive small bodies orbiting in tandem with Jupiter.

How Different Cultures Celebrate The New Year

YouthSpaceCultureSociety
Most people follow the Gregorian calendar, which has 365 days, or 12 months in the year. So January 1st ends up being the most commonly celebrated New Year. But, depending on who you speak with, the New Year reaches far beyond January 1st.

The Word Indigenous - Explained

YouthSpaceLanguageCulture
Indigenous people are the first people to live in a place.

Tanabata

YouthSpaceCultureFestivities
Learn about the Star Festival in Japan.