Suggested Searches

Games and Interactives

Tundra wetlands are shown in late spring at the Yukon Delta National Wildlife Refuge in Alaska.

Climate Time Machine

This series of visualizations shows how some of the key indicators of climate change have changed in Earth's recent history.

Exoplanet Travel Bureau

Even the closest exoplanets are too far away to visit. But what if they weren't? Take a trip outside our solar system with guided tours in English and Spanish.

Unusual late-season melting in Greenland turned the glacier’s surface into a mishmash of ice, firn, melt, and dirt.

Global Ice Viewer

Ice, which covers 10 percent of Earth's surface, is disappearing rapidly. See how climate change has affected glaciers, sea ice and continental ice sheets worldwide.

Hearing Hubble

Through data sonification, scientists assign sounds to different elements of an image. With Hearing Hubble, you get to make your own sonification.

Hooray for SLS!

Written by Lane Polak and illustrated by Heather Legge-Click, this story introduces young explorers to the unique elements needed for Artemis missions.

Stars fill the view. A dense, spherical collection of blue and yellow-white stars toward the center. The image’s edges hold redder foreground stars, and many small background stars.

Hubble's Cosmic Adventure

In this game, you get to decide where in the universe to visit. Answer questions, and let your choices lead you to an incredible destination in our cosmos.

The Lost Universe

NASA’s first TTRPG invites you to take on a classic villain as you embark on an exciting quest to unlock more knowledge about our universe.

Hubble's view of the Horsehead Nebula

Name That Nebula

What do you see in the cosmic clouds? Test your nebulae knowledge and match these tumultuous clouds of gas and dust with their true names.

NASA Climate Kids

Games, activities, videos, and stories to help students understand our changing planet through the eyes of NASA missions studying Earth.

NASA Home and City

NASA technology is all around you. Discover which technologies originally used for space missions are now making life better on Earth.

NASA Kids' Club Nebula riding in a purpose spaceship around a circular space station

NASA Kids' Club

A space for children to play games as they learn about NASA and its missions. Here, you will find games of various skill levels for children K–4.

NASA Space Place

NASA Space Place's mission is to inspire upper-elementary-aged kids' learning of space and Earth science through games, activities, and short videos.

Skymap

The Hubble Skymap puts the night sky at your fingertips any time of day. Roam the Milky Way to find a selection of galaxies, stars, and nebulae as seen by Hubble.

Living off the land

Solar System Treks

Online portals that allow you to visualize, explore, and analyze the surfaces of other worlds using real data returned from a growing fleet of spacecraft.

This image of the Crab Nebula combines data from NASA’s Imaging X-ray Polarimetry Explorer (IXPE) in magenta and NASA’s Chandra X-ray Observatory in dark purple.

What Hubble Saw on Your Birthday

Hubble explores the universe 24 hours a day, 7 days a week. That means it has observed some fascinating cosmic wonder on your birthday.

You Are Going

Illustrated by former NASA intern Shane Tolentino, this story shares a glimpse into future Artemis missions. Learn about the elements that will make Artemis possible.

NASA's Eyes 3D Visualizations

NASA's Eyes is a suite of applications that allows everyone to explore and understand real NASA data and imagery in a fun and interactive way. The apps run inside a regular web browser, so any device with an internet connection and a browser can run them.

Eyes on the Solar System banner displaying Juno spacecraft in the bottom right, Mars 2020 EDL on the left, Mars in the bottom left and Jupiter in the top right. We can see The Earth in the distance.

Eyes on the Solar System

Explore planets, their moons, asteroids, comets and the spacecraft exploring them. In this interactive, you can also fast-forward or rewind time, from 1950 to 2050.

Eyes on Asteroids banner displaying an asteroid field in space with the Sun in the top right corner casting light on the asteroids and debris

Eyes on Asteroids

Explore the 30,000+ asteroids near Earth’s orbit, see the next five closest approaches to Earth, and learn about current and historic missions in this real-time 3D simulation of the solar system. 

Eyes on the Earth banner displaying Jason 3 spacecraft orbiting around Earth. We can see the spacecraft instrument frustum looking at the Earth surface with colored data where the frustum interesects with Earth.

Eyes on Earth

Fly along with Earth science missions in real-time, monitor Earth's vital signs, and see satellite imagery of the latest major weather events in an immersive, 3D environment.

Eyes on the Exoplanets banner displaying an hypothetical exoplanet with its moon and a star in the distance,

Eyes on Exoplanets

Discover over 5,500 exoplanet systems in this 3D interactive simulation.  You can visit every exoplanet ever discovered and ride along with the spacecraft that found them. 

Keep Exploring

Discover More From NASA