Spacefiles

Spacefiles « Series from 2005

Series from 2005

Broadcast info
Genres: Documentary, Special Interest

An enthralling overview of the Solar System, our Galaxy and the greater Universe.

In a flow of superb CGI, glorious images from deep space and incisive writing, 26 beautifully crafted episodes deliver the compelling fundamentals of space, astronomy and cosmic exploration.

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The Sun - Powerhouse of the Solar System

The Sun is our local star - a nuclear reactor at the hub of the Solar System. Each second, the Sun loses four million tons of mass - energy that will keep the Sun blazing for another five billion years. Electrically charged particles stream from the Sun - the solar wind. Twists in the magnetic field trigger gigantic ejections that turn the wind into a storm.

Inside Track - Mercury, Closest Planet to the Sun

Of the nine planets, Mercury orbits on the inside track - the closest planet to the Sun. Baked and irradiated, Mercury is a cratered little world - a pristine record of the impactors that rained from space during the early Solar System. Mercury is weird. It has double sunrises and a day twice as long as its year.

Venus - Planet From Hell

Venus is Earth gone wrong - a lifeless planet with a dense and choking atmosphere and temperatures to melt lead. Constantly shrouded in cloud, Venus could once have been Earth's twin with oceans and continents, even simple life. But there is a theory that as the Sun matured and its luminosity increased, Venus became hell.

Earth - Home Planet

We live on the largest inner planet, third from the Sun and the first with a moon. Earth is lucky - at just the right distance from the Sun for life to evolve in the oceans, for green plants to produce breathable air and for humankind to develop agriculture and civilization. But from space there is no sign of the six billion people on Earth.

The Moon: Our Partner in Space

The Moon was probably formed when a body the size of Mars twice hit early Earth. The first collision was a glancing blow. The second, two days later, was a major impact that threw enough material into orbit to form the Moon. Since then, the Moon has been steadily receding.

Jaw-Drop - Eclipses and Aurorae

A total eclipse of the Sun is the greatest spectacular in the Solar System. It happens when the Moon, which is 400 times smaller than the Sun, completely obscures the Sun, which is 400 times farther from us than the Moon - an astonishing celestial coincidence.

Mars - The Red Planet

Asteroids, Meteors and Impacts

King Planet - Jupiter

Lord Of The Rings - Saturn

Uranus & Neptune - Outer Gas Giants

Pluto - Farthest Planet from the Sun

Comet

Night Sky

Discovery

Whither?

Orbit - Monitoring Earth from Space

High Hopes - Snags with Shuttle & International Space Station

Quest

Zero To Zillions

Galaxy

Telescope

Far Out - Cosmic Measurement & Structure

X-Ray - Invisible Astronomy - Gamma Ray to Radio

Black Hole

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