• The Sun and the Water Cycle –in comic form join Camillaspace with the girls Sofia and Marisol, and discover that without the Sun there would be no water cycle; that means no clouds, no rain – no weather!.
• Hubble Space Telescope: Discoveries
• James Webb Space Telescope Science Guide
• Hanny’s Voorwerp – this is the story about a young Dutch girl, Hanny van Arkel, who in the summer of 2007 was examining galaxies as part of the Galaxy Zoo project when she noticed a bluish cloud-like object and asked what it was.
• Cindi in Space –in comic form is a story about an android girl, her two dogs, and the CINDI mission (Counted Ion Neutral Dynamics Investigation) to study our upper atmosphere.
• SCOSTEP– (Scientific Committee on Solar-Terrestrial Physics) offers a series of books in comic form about solar terrestrial physics.
• The Day Joshua Jumped Too Much and Adventures in the Attic – are the first two of a 3-book series as part of the Think Scientifically literacy program from the Solar Dynamics Observatory (SDO) program.
• Earth as Art – A collection of pictures of our planet taken by several orbiting satellites.
• Nine publications from Solar-Terrestrial Environment Laboratory, Nagoya University and the Scientific Committee on Solar-Terrestrial Physics. (What is the Aurora?; What is the Geomagnetic Field?; What is the Ozone Hole?; What is the Solar Wind?; What is the Aurora?; What is the Geomagnetic Field?; What is the Geomagnetic Field?; What is Global Warming?; What are Cosmic Rays?; What are the Polar Regions?; What is the Upper Atmosphere?; What is the Sun-Climate Relationship?)
• The Secret in the Cellar (“A Written in Bone forensic mystery from colonial America”)
• Lucy’s Planet Hunt (“. . . or, how to see things in a different light.”)
• The Young Scientist Journal is written and run entirely by students aged 12-20.
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