Space Scoop (Engels)
Hier kan je alle nieuwste Space Scoops bekijken. Space Scoop is onze sterrenkunde nieuwsdienst voor kinderen vanaf 8 jaar. Het idee achter de Space Scoop is dat nieuwe ontdekkingen in de sterrenkunde interessant en inspirerend zijn voor kinderen. Door deze informatie op een leuke manier beschikbaar te maken, hebben kinderen toegang tot de laatste nieuwtjes in de sterrenkunde en kunnen we kinderen inspireren tot interesse in de wetenschap en technologie. De Space Scoop is ook geschikt om in de klas te gebruiken.
De Space Scoop is in de volgende talen beschikbaar:
Engels,
Dutch,
Italian,
German,
Spanish,
Polish,
Albanian,
Arabic,
Bengali,
Bulgarian,
Chinese,
Czech,
Danish,
Farsi,
French,
Greek,
Gujarati,
Hebrew,
Hindi,
Hungarian,
Icelandic,
Indonesian,
Japanese,
Korean,
Maltese,
Norwegian,
Portuguese,
K’iche’,
Romanian,
Russian,
Sinhalese,
Slovenian,
Swahili,
Tamil,
Tetum,
Turkish,
Tz’utujil,
Ukrainian,
Vietnamese,
Welsh
An Astronomically Wrong Assumption
26 April 2012:
It’s My Turn to Shine!
25 April 2012:
A Cosmic Game of Hide and Seek
18 April 2012:
Archaeologists of the Universe
12 April 2012:
A Hot Discovery of Some Cold Planets
12 April 2012:
A Star Turned Inside Out!
2 April 2012:
Is it a Bird? Is it a Plane? No, it’s a Super-Earth!
28 March 2012:
Galaxies Galore!
21 March 2012:
The Weird Shape of Weird Stuff
16 March 2012:
Greedy Teenage Galaxies
14 March 2012:
What Big Eyes You Have
7 March 2012:
Astronomers Find Life on… Earth?!
29 February 2012:
Optical Illusions in Space
15 February 2012:
Only the Biggest Survive
14 February 2012:
Throwing Rocks in Space
9 February 2012:
The Universal Laws of Science
8 February 2012:
The Star Kicker
1 February 2012: Every 50 years or so, a massive star in our Galaxy explodes in what is called a supernova. In the explosion, the star’s outer shells of gas are blown into space. This hot gas gives off X-ray radiation, which astronomers can photograph using special telescopes in space.
A Ghostly Face in Space
1 February 2012: Do you ever look at clouds in the sky and see the shapes of objects and people in them? Well, astronomers do the same thing in the night sky.
Galaxies that Fizzled Out Young
25 January 2012:
Unexpected Visitor in the Night Sky Caught on Camera!
24 January 2012: Scientists have launched many spacecraft to study the objects in our Solar System. So far, though, only one has travelled to the edge of the Solar System and it is called Voyager 1. It has taken Voyager 1 more than 30 years to make this incredible road trip, so you can image why astronomers get excited when objects from the outer Solar System visit Earth instead!
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