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  • Circular cloud with a bright center against space. Caption: To understand comets, we return to the earliest solar system,

    Focuses on comets, those mostly unpredictable, wandering objects in the solar system. Uses time-lapse images while explaining a comet's tail and the meteors, or "falling stars," associated with it. Mentions Halley's and Hale-Bopp comets and international efforts to see these bodies more closely. Contains actual pictures of comets photographed by space probes.

    (Source: DCMP)

  • Student from the magic school bus standing in front of a model of the Earth and moon with a miniature school bus traveling between them. Caption: We need to go this way!

    The Magic School Bus is an award winning animated children’s television series based on the book series of the same title by Joanna Cole and Bruce Degen. It is notable for its use of celebrity talent and being both highly entertaining and educational. Ms. Frizzle takes the kids to space when Dorothy Ann says she's discovered an asteroid headed straight for their school. During their mission, the class learns the difference between meteor, asteroids and comets. They also try to find a way to change the rotation of the asteroid around the sun so that it doesn't hit Earth.

    (Source: DCMP)

  • Sunset over the ocean. Spanish captions.

    Students investigate properties of the Sun. Special attention is given to other celestial bodies in space such as asteroids and comets.

    (Source: DCMP)

  • Comet shooting through space. Caption: First, meteoroids come from comets and asteroids.

    Part of a series that features a wide variety of video footage, photographs, diagrams and colorful, animated graphics and labels. Begins with a simple definition of the term and concludes with a critical thinking question. For this particular video, students will focus on the term meteor. Part of the Science Video Vocab Series.

    (Source: DCMP)

  • The planets of our solar system in a line. Caption: We'll begin with Mercury, the closest planet to the Sun.

    Satellite footage, telescopic photos, and animation are used to teach students about the many aspects of the solar system. Viewers are introduced to ancient astronomers, telescopes, observatories, and space exploration. Students will discover facts about planets, orbits, gravity, revolution, and rotation. The program also features discussions of the sun, comets, asteroids, and meteors. Part of the Real World Science series.

    (Source: DCMP)

  • Cartoon of a face against the backdrop of the surface of a barren planet. Spanish captions.

    Gabriela, Manuel and Leonardo are three friends who accidentally start a rocket that takes them to space. Their journey through space takes them to different planets and strange worlds. Throughout their journey, they have the help of Maqui, an on-board computer. Maqui helps them learn about the universe. The three friends believe they have landed on a planet, but later they learn that they are on a comet. They learn the difference between comets and asteroids.

    (Source: DCMP)

  • Computer screen displaying two uneven strands of light. Caption: that thrives where life would seem impossible.

    With support from the National Science Foundation, Astrobiologist Richard Hoover really goes to extremes to find living things that thrive where life would seem to be impossible--from the glaciers of the Alaskan Arctic to the ice sheets of Antarctica. He thinks it is even possible that over the course of billions of years, life has spread around the solar system--a sort of cosmic cross pollination. Microbes could live in the ice deep within comets, frozen there for eons until a collision with another planet or moon delivered them to a new home.

    (Source: DCMP)

  • Six planets orbiting around the sun. Caption: (narrator) It is gravity that holds our solar system together.

    Gravity is the most powerful and exacting force in the universe. It binds us together, its reach hangs stars in the sky and its grip crushes light. Without gravity, stars, comets, moons, nebulae, and even the Earth itself would not exist. Explore how science and humanity discovered, overcame, and utilized gravity. Learn what it takes to propel objects into the heavens, to ride a wave, or to ski down a slope. Take a front row seat as an astronaut subjects himself to the weightless wonders of the specially modified aircraft used to train astronauts known as the "Vomit Comet."

    (Source: DCMP)