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Milky Way Explorer

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  1. 20Milky Way
    1. Welcome

      0:58
    2. Our Home

      0:40
    3. A Galactic Bar

      3:18
    4. TW Hydrae

      2:09
    5. Crab Nebula

      1:32
    6. Manatee Nebula

      2:34
    7. Smith Cloud

      3:40
    8. Pulsars

      2:29
    9. Lockman Hole

      2:35
    10. Galactic Bulge

      0:54
    11. Astrochemistry

      4:48
    12. Cat Paw Nebula

      4:22
    13. HL Tau

      1:05
    14. R Sculptoris

      2:30
    15. Magellanic Clouds

      3:03
    16. Supernova 1987A

      3:30
    17. Tarantula Nebula

      2:42
    18. Local Group

      2:38
    19. M31 M33 Bridge

      1:43
    20. HK Tau

      0:43
  2. 17Our Solar System
    1. Sun and Space Weather

      1:29
    2. Mercury

      1:48
    3. Venus

      2:08
    4. Earth

      2:38
    5. Our Moon

      1:27
    6. Mars

      2:18
    7. Jupiter

      2:32
    8. Jupiter's Moon Io

      2:12
    9. Saturn

      2:50
    10. Saturn's Moon Enceladus

      1:54
    11. Saturn's Moon Titan

      1:35
    12. Uranus

      1:43
    13. Neptune

      1:29
    14. Comets

      5:21
    15. History of Water

      2:18
    16. Asteroids

      4:50
    17. Pluto and Pals

      3:34
  3. 7Center of the Galaxy
    1. Sagittarius A Star

      3:11
    2. Sagittarius A West

      0:48
    3. Trapped Stars

      1:15
    4. Weird Magnetics

      1:10
    5. Feast for a Beast

      3:04
    6. G2 Cloud or Star

      1:33
    7. Shadow Chemistry

      1:14
  4. 12Orion Constellation
    1. Welcome to Orion

      1:16
    2. Orion in Another Light

      1:57
    3. Snowlines

      3:17
    4. Orion Nebula

      1:06
    5. Betelgeuse, Red Supergiant

      2:16
    6. Molecules In Space

      3:03
    7. Barnard's Loop

      1:05
    8. Interstellar Pebbles

      1:56
    9. Stellar Masers

      1:22
    10. Bellatrix

      1:04
    11. Proplyds

      0:44
    12. Star Formation

      1:20
  5. 3Hidden
    1. Go to map: Our Solar System

    2. Go to map: Orion Constellation

    3. Go to map: Center of the Galaxy

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The National Radio Astronomy Observatory is a facility of the U.S. National Science Foundation operated under cooperative agreement by Associated Universities, Inc.
Founded in 1956, the NRAO provides state-of-the-art radio telescope facilities for use by the international scientific community. NRAO telescopes are open to all astronomers regardless of institutional or national affiliation. Observing time on NRAO telescopes is available on a competitive basis to qualified scientists after evaluation of research proposals on the basis of scientific merit, the capability of the instruments to do the work, and the availability of the telescope during the requested time. NRAO also provides both formal and informal programs in education and public outreach for teachers, students, the general public, and the media.
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