Learning Space - videos on several topics, including do-it-yourself projects. #AskNASA - NASA experts answer your questions about space exploration, science and aeronautics.ĭocumentaries - Enjoy longform video from NASA TV on the Hubble Space Telescope, New Horizons’ flyby of Pluto, the Apollo missions and more.Įlmo Visits NASA - the Sesame Street character learns about the space agency. NASA at Home: Zoom without the Boom. Explore how sounds travels, sonic booms, NASA’s newest experimental aircraft and the history of X-planes in this episode of NASA at Home. Build your own simple “speakers” for a phone (or similar device) that show students how to amplify sound waves using items you can find around the house. Create a Moon Journal, make the Moon’s phases with cookies, and build your own lunar lander NASA at Home: To the Moon and Beyond! Learn about Earth’s Moon, it’s phases, what it takes to travel to there, and NASA’s new Artemis mission to go back to the Moon to stay. Build a soda straw rocket with things you can find at home, exercise like an astronaut and learn to draw yourself on the moon! NASA at Home: Rockets in Motion – Newton’s Third Law. learn about rockets, Newton’s Third Law of Motion, and unique careers at NASA. This episode includes hands-on activities students can try at home with materials from around the house. NASA at Home: Mars 2020: Perseverance. Learn about the 4th planet from the Sun, sending spacecraft to Mars, and the newest Mars rover, Perseverance. Build your own parachute for an eggstronaut with materials you can find at home and celebrate the historic launch of the first humans from the U.S. Learn about orbits, the International Space Station, gravity, and the engineering design process. NASA at Home: Launching America. Learn about NASA’s Commercial Crew Program returning space flight back to American soil in this episode of NASA at Home. Make Your Own Cloud (in a Bottle) - By experimenting with temperature and pressure, you can make your own cloud appear in a bottle in this simple demonstration. Asteroid “Close Approach” - how close is an asteroid when it makes a “close approach” to Earth? Here’s an activity you can do at home that will show you that “close” doesn’t always mean the same thing in space as it does here on Earth.
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