But here's another way to think about space. The galaxies of outer space are filled with stars. Does ten billion trillion stars mean anything to you? If everybody on earth - all six billion people - counted 1,000 stars per second for twenty-four hours a day, it would take 50 years to count all those stars. You could get tired just thinking about it.

Of course our Sun, which gives light, energy, and life to Earth, is only one of those trillions of stars. Now space seems like a much bigger place, doesn't it!

Just like a road map helps show the way to the beach, or a tour book tells you which sights to see when you visit a new city, Don't Know Much About® Space introduces the sights and places that we know exist in our great big universe. It asks and answers a lot of questions you may have thought of. It also asks some questions to which science has no answers yet! But one thing is for certain: space will be part of our future.


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1. Who said: "If I have seen further, it is by standing on the shoulders of giants."
A: Copernicus
B: Kepler
C: Galileo
D: Newton

2. Which of the 5 layers of atmosphere between Earth and space do we inhabit?
A: the mesosphere
B: the stratosphere
C: the troposphere
D: the thermosphere

3. What is the name of Saturn's largest moon?
A: Phoebe
B: Titan
C: Phoebe
D: Ganymede

4. When the biggest stars die, a massive explosion takes place. What is this called?
A: a supernova
B: a white dwarf
C: a black hole
D: a supergiant

5. What is the name of the telescope that orbits at the edge of the Earth's atmosphere?
A: Hale
B: Pathfinder
C: Hubble
D: Prospector