close
The Wayback Machine - https://web.archive.org/web/20230930120810/https://www.nasa.gov/interactives/

Welcome to the new NASA website. We’re working to continuously improve your web experience. If you don't find what you are looking for, give feedback.

Suggested Searches

Games and Interactives

Explore an interactive universe, be entertained with educational games, find connections to trace space-related technology back to your life and so much more — all through NASA’s Interactive Features.

International Space Station -- Spot the Station

International Space Station -- Spot the Station

Spot the Station

Watch the International Space Station pass overhead from several thousand worldwide locations. It is the third brightest object in the sky and easy to spot if you know when to look up.

Eyes on the Earth landing page

Eyes on the Earth

Track Earth's vital signs and fly along with NASA's Earth-observing satellites. See natural hazards from space, view near real-time science data and keep an Eye on our planet's heath with this stunning 3D visualization.

Global ice viewer interactive

Global Ice Viewer

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

vibrant image of Earth from space

Earth Quizzes

Think you know a lot about our planet? Take these Earth Science quizzes and find out.

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

NASA Kids' Club Clubhouse

Students in grades K-4 can learn from these interactive games. The games cover a wide variety of skills that are important to every young mind.

Screen capture of the climate time machine site

Climate Time Machine

This series of visualizations shows how some of Earth's key climate indicators are changing over time.

Screenshot of the Exoplanet Travel site

Exoplanet Travel Bureau

Even the closest exoplanets are too far away to visit. But what if they weren't? We worked with NASA scientists, futurists and artists to imagine exoplanet tourism. Choose your adventure with guided tours, in English and Spanish.

Screenshot from Home and City cartoon graphic showing a home and a city

NASA Home and City

Have you ever wondered why space exploration should matter to you? Or how the work of NASA scientists and engineers affects your daily life? “Spinoffs” are commercial products and services derived from NASA technology.

NASA Space Place logo

NASA Space Place

For students in grades K-8, NASA Space Place has lots of interactives to learn about the solar system and the universe with games, crafts, stories and animations.

You Are Going book cover

You Are Going

You Are Going shares a glimpse into future Artemis missions. Learn all about the elements that will help make Artemis possible: the powerful Space Launch System rocket, the Orion spacecraft, the Gateway, and so much more.

First Woman Cover

First Woman

First Woman tells the tale of Callie Rodriguez, the first woman to explore the Moon. While Callie is a fictional character, the first female astronaut and person of color will soon set foot on the Moon – a historic milestone and part of upcoming NASA Artemis missions.

Scores of baby stars shrouded by dust are revealed in this infrared image of the star-forming region NGC 2174

NASA’s Eyes

Experience Earth and our solar system, the universe and the spacecraft exploring them, with immersive apps for Mac, PC and mobile devices.

Artist's concept of our solar system.

Solar System Treks

The Solar System Treks are online, browser-based portals that allow you to visualize, explore, and analyze the surfaces of other worlds using real data returned from a growing fleet of spacecraft. You can view the worlds through the eyes of many different instruments, pilot real-time 3D flyovers above mountains and into craters, and conduct measurements of surface features.

BERJAYA

SCaN Now

Click on the link to see the real-time status of all the ground stations for NASA’s space communications for all NASA missions, including Artemis and its goal of landing the first woman and next man on the Moon by 2024.