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Using rarely seen footage, this program traces the history of human space exploration from Yuri Gagarin’s first orbit of Earth, through the moon landings, to the present-day Shuttle program and Mir. Also discussed are how scientists get things into orbit, what it’s like to live and work in space, what happens when astronauts get sick, and how plants are grown in space. (20 minutes)



 
    

Item#: This title is currently not available.
Copyright date: ©1998



Part of the Series : The Complete Cosmos
     


Only available in the US and Canada.




From Stonehenge to Hubble: Looking to the Stars

Animation and historical footage trace the progress of astronomy from megalithic observatories through the genius of Isaac Newton, to the Hubble telescope. The Hubble's eye, a tour de force in astronomy tools, is used to describe how telescopes work ...(more details)
 
Black Holes, Dark Matter

This program presents the latest ideas on space regarding such questions as: What are quasars? Is there dark matter? Are there wormholes to other universes? Where's the nearest black hole and how does it work? (11 minutes)(more details)
 
Uranus, Neptune, and the Milky Way: Dark, Deep Space

Uranus and Neptune are studied as unidentical twins-vast gasbags inhabiting the cold, dark outer reaches of our galaxy. Exciting new time-lapse photography of the planets and their weather systems is presented, along with animation that depicts their...(more details)
 
Spaceship Earth and the Search for Intelligent Life

This program shows how the ecological health of the planet is being monitored from space, as it examines issues such as the deterioration of the ozone layer, global warming, melting polar ice caps, and the effects of solar winds. The possibility of l...(more details)
 
The Next Step: Of Robots and Space Stations

This program begins with an examination of unmanned space exploration: Galileo's mission to Jupiter, Cassini's to Saturn, NEAR's to an asteroid, and Rosetta's to a comet, as well as probes to Mars and Pluto. It then uses the International Space Stati...(more details)
 


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