Educational Links astronomy for kids NASA KIDS; The Space Place from JPL; JPL KIDS; Astronomy ForKids; Starchild A Learning Center for Young Astronomers. Electromagnetic Spectrum. http://spider.ipac.caltech.edu/staff/lmh/IPAC/edulinks.html
Myschoolonline Home Help own observations. astronomy for kids Like the Sky Events site, Astronomyfor Kids tells you what's happening this month. You'll http://www.myschoolonline.com/content_gallery/0,3138,47750-105460-51-47414,00.ht
Extractions: All about space, planets, universe, solar system, mercury, venus, earth, mars, jupiter, saturn, uranus, neptune, pluto, sun, astronomy, stars, comets, asteroids, space stations, quasers, pulsars, moons, star signs, spacecrafts, craters, lunar eclipse, solar eclipse, observatories, radio telescopes, probes, satelite's, space exploration for children at kidsinspace.com.
HomePage >> ½ÌÓý×ÊÔ´ >> Õ¾µãËÑË÷ Welcome to astronomy for kids! Springer LINK Astronomy and Astrophysics,No Longer Available. NASA ADS, astronomy for kids, Welcome to AURA. http://www.edu.cn/HomePage/jiao_yu_zi_yuan/list.php?listid=2164
Planet Earth And BeyondSites For Children November 1997 astronomy for kids. The solar system, planets, sun,stars, asteroids, and galaxies are all available in this site. http://www.ala.org/parentspage/greatsites/earth.html
Extractions: 700+ Great Sites Page Animals Top of Page The following sites are recommended for children from preschool through age 14, their parents, and other caregivers. Recommendations apply only to sites listed, not to any sites that may be linked from these sites. For selection criteria developed by the site review committee, click here . Compiled by the Children and Technology Committee of the Association for Library Service to Children, a division of the American Library Association. November 1997 Animal Cams!.
Space & Astronomy astronomy for kids! Come along on our journey through the stars! Astronomyfor Kids A quick overview of our solar system for the younger student. http://homeschooling.about.com/cs/scispace/
Logan Library-Summer Reading Program astronomy for kids Puzzle Pages Puzzles you can play online. Magic StarchildAstronomy information and games for kids ages 512. OTHER http://www.logan.lib.ut.us/kids/astronomy.htm
Extractions: There are numerous activities and games at this site, as well as information. One game allows people to calculate how much they would weigh on the other planets and the moon, and how old they would be on another planet where years might be much shorter or longer than they are on Earth. The activities include Space Art, games, coloring activities and jokes. Kids can join the NASA Club for Kids here.
Kidsastronomy.com Stars, planets, black holes, Junior Astronomers Club.Category kids and Teens School Time Science astronomy and SpaceBringing astronomy to kids. http://www.kidsastronomy.com/
Kids Adventures In Space! kids Adventures in Space. astronomy FOR 3 TO 10 YEAR OLDS. Have youever looked out of your window at night and wondered about all http://www.stargazers.freeserve.co.uk/
Extractions: Kids Adventures in Space ASTRONOMY FOR 3 TO 10 YEAR OLDS Have you ever looked out of your window at night and wondered about all those stars and planets up there? If so, click on, AND HAVE FUN! Stars The Moon Rockets etc Planets Our Sun Comets etc Each section contains lots of information and fun things to see and do Click me for more puzzles, games and pages to colour in! Jokes and things to make Thanks to Geoff for applet help and Sophie and Jazz for testing! This site is best viewed with a Java enabled browser Updated 5th March 2003
HighBridge Hills Northern Lights Educational Center's Astronomy Camp Offers handson astronomy instruction in separate programs for kids 7-14, families, and adults. Located in Highbridge, Wisconsin. Brochure, astronomy resources, FAQ, dates, and rates. http://highbridgehills.tripod.com/
Extractions: Welcome to the HighBridge Hills Northern Lights Educational Center's ASTRONOMY CAMP website, the nation's 1st camp dedicated to the advancement of astronomy education. Astronomy Camp starts in May and runs through September, with one week sessions We also facilitate the "Astronomer's Paradise" a year round campground with 50 DARK sites perfect for the Fall Colors Getaway, or winter sports such as cross counrty skiing or snow mobiling (the national snow molbile trail runs right through our land). Our heated bunkhouses provide safehaven from the elements. Located in the beautiful northwoods of Northern Wisconsin. HHNLEC, strives to provide dark camp sites and a safe enviroment. Patrolled 24 hours a day. Please feel free to look over our site, if you have any questions you may contact the HHNLEC Program Director by clicking here.
Extractions: Welcome to the cybespace guide for middle elementary students. Click on the area of the signpost that interests you, and explore some great sites! Although care was taken in the selection of the linked sites, the fast changing nature of the Internet makes it impossible to monitor changes. Parents or adults should monitor Internet use by children. Please notify me if you find something inappropriate. I collect no information at this site. Email
Astronomy! Reach The Stars! A window to the universe. Current news, pages for kids, history, links. http://www.geocities.com/CapeCanaveral/Launchpad/4515
Extractions: Welcome to Astronomy! Reach the Stars! Thanks for stopping in. Many apologies for the inadequate site updates. There is still many interesting things to browse through, though the Sky Watch pages and News pages have not been re-written with recent information. Please choose the subject that interests you from the list below. The telescope sections have information on different professional observatories and buying tips for the beginner. Check out the new revised Solar System pages (Frames only version available at the moment) . Visit the shuttle information pages and be sure to visit the Challenger tribute page to keep the memory alive. Are you looking for some resources on building your homepage? Stop by the Community Resource page for some helpful tips, instructions, and links to get you started.
SSDOO Education: Activities For Students Space science activities for elementary and secondary students in astronomy, physics, life sciences, and space technology. http://ssdoo.gsfc.nasa.gov/education/kids.html
Kidseclipse: Total Solar Eclipse Teaches children the wonders of astronomy through total solar eclipses. Essays from kids worldwide, teach section for classrooms, and gallery of past eclipses. http://www.kidseclipse.com/
Deep Impact Home Page NASA homepage for the planned mission, which will fly by Comet 9P/Tempel 1 on July 4, 2005. Includes kids' activities, lesson plans for educators, and an amateur astronomy observing program. http://deepimpact.jpl.nasa.gov/
Extractions: Deep Impact will be the first mission to make a spectacular football stadium-sized crater 7-15 stories deep into a speeding comet. Dramatic images from both the flyby spacecraft and the impactor will be sent back to distant Earth as data in near-real time. These first ever views deep beneath a comet's surface, and additional scientific measurements will provide clues to the formation of the solar system. Amateur astronomers will combine efforts with astronomers at larger telescopes to offer the public an earth-based look at this incredible July 2005 encounter with a comet. New educational activities added 9/12/02! Several members of the instrument team at Ball Aerospace celebrate a major milestone in the Deep Impact mission - mounting the instruments to the instrument platform of the flyby spacecraft. These instruments will observe the impact from a safe distance and then look inside of the crater as Comet Tempel 1 flies overhead.
StarChild: A Learning Center For Young Astronomers Information and online movies related to the solar system and space exploration. A service of the Category kids and Teens School Time Science astronomy and SpaceWelcome to StarChild A Learning Center for Young Astronomers. Solar SystemUniverse Space Stuff Glossary Solar System Universe Space Stuff Glossary, http://starchild.gsfc.nasa.gov/docs/StarChild/StarChild.html
Astronomy Space - History - News -What You Need To Know About Astronomy - Space Similar pages kidsastronomy.miningco.com/kids/kidsastronomy/mbody.htm Similar pages More results from kidsastronomy.miningco.com www.startwinkles.com/ Similar pages Rader's KAPILI.COMTopic List GALAXIES Kapili.com Another section of our astronomy content gives you thelowdown on galaxies, how they are classified and their organization. http://kidsastronomy.miningco.com/kids/kidsastronomy/
ASTRO KIDS: Mars Images, details and facts about this planet, its surface and its temperature. http://www.astronomy.com/content/static/AstroForKids/mars.asp
Extractions: JPL/NASA Mars is the fourth planet from the sun. Its orbit is roughly 142 million miles from the sun. The planet's reddish color is caused by rust (iron oxide) in the soil. Mars is the planet most like Earth. It takes 687 Earth days (about 2 Earth years) for Mars to go around the sun one time, and Mars spins on its axis at about the same speed as Earth does. It takes 24 hours and 37 minutes (about 1 Earth day) for Mars to rotate one time. Part of the middle section of Valles Marineris JPL/NASA Mars has the largest canyon (Valles Marineris), and the highest volcano (Olympus Mons) in the solar system. If Valles Marineris were on Earth, it would span the United States, from New York on the East Coast to California on the West Coast. It is about 1,300 miles long, 310 miles wide, and about 5 miles deep. Olympus Mons is nearly 3 times higher than Mount Everest. It rises above the Martian surface more than 82 thousand feet. This giant volcano's base is the size of Missouri. There are also lots of channels on Mars, and they look like Earth's river channels. Most scientists believe water once flowed on the martian surface, but new studies suggest there may still be water in some places on the surface.
ASTRO KIDS: Saturn Provides images and facts about the size, the rings, the temperature and the moons of the planet. http://www.astronomy.com/content/static/AstroForKids/saturn.asp
Extractions: Reta Beebe /STScI / NASA Saturn is the sixth planet from the sun. It orbits the sun at a distance of 888 million miles (about 10 times as far from the sun as Earth). Saturn would fit 9 1/2 Earths across its face. It is the second-largest planet in the solar system and has a diameter of 74,898 miles. Saturn is also called the Ringed Planet. Although Jupiter, Uranus, and Neptune also have ring systems, Saturn's is the largest. Saturn's rings are 169,800 miles across, but only 10 yards thick. Saturn's moon Mimas looks like the Death Star spacecraft from Star Wars JPL/NASA Saturn's rings are made of ice and rock particles, some as big as a mini-van. If you could find a bathtub big enough to put Saturn in, it would float. Saturn's density is less than water. It takes Saturn 29 Earth years to go around the sun one time, but only 11 hours to spin on its axis one time. Saturn looks like a ball that is being squished. Because Saturn spins so fast, its middle bulges while its poles flatten out. This makes Saturn look like somebody is squeezing it. The atmosphere of this Ringed Planet is like Jupiter's atmosphere. Saturn holds mostly hydrogen (97%), helium (3%). Saturn also has beautiful bands like Jupiter, but these colorful features are hidden by haze and smog that make up the planet's high atmosphere.