Welcome to the greatest story that's never been told. In a new, ground breaking series we'll be telling the story of the planets as never before.Welcome to the greatest story that's never been told. In a new, ground breaking series we'll be telling the story of the planets as never before.Welcome to the greatest story that's never been told. In a new, ground breaking series we'll be telling the story of the planets as never before.
- Awards
- 1 win & 4 nominations
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- TriviaWhen the Venera probes first sent back their images from the surface of Venus, there was wide speculation that there was life on the planet due to irregularities in the images noted as "black flaps" and "scorpions". It wasn't until later confirmed that the anomalies in the images were simply artifacts due to image processing. The surface of Venus is essentially the temperature of the inside of a burning house.
- Alternate versionsShown in the USA on PBS's "Nova" series, with narration of Brian Cox replaced by voice of Zachary Quinto.
Featured review
It was so majestic, I think there were a lot of moments I was actually holding my breath.
The series is packed with information about the planets and the Sun. I thought I knew about our solar system, but obviously I did not. Facts are presented in the most comprehensible way possible and the visual effects make watching it quite thrilling and elevating. It's such an experience to be reminded of the vastness of being beyond ours. I've always been fascinated by space, but watching this took it to a whole new level.
The series, among other things, shows the aspirations and efforts that have gone into bringing us this kind of knowledge. You get to see people from Juno, Galileo, Cassini and New Horizon missions and many more which makes the stories much more accessible because you get to walk with them on their path of discovery when they give you snapshots of what was happening in their minds and in their teams. It was also exciting to hear about future projects such as Mars 2020 (I believe NASA based on the public vote is going to choose a name for it) and Enceladus' planned orbiters. I am, too, happy to be living in the era of "Are We Alone?" quest.
Let's not forget about the song "The Void." It's supremely beautiful.
Thank you BBC for producing this masterpiece and PBS for bringing it to us.
Update: the name is Perseverance and that is what we should all aspire to have.
The series is packed with information about the planets and the Sun. I thought I knew about our solar system, but obviously I did not. Facts are presented in the most comprehensible way possible and the visual effects make watching it quite thrilling and elevating. It's such an experience to be reminded of the vastness of being beyond ours. I've always been fascinated by space, but watching this took it to a whole new level.
The series, among other things, shows the aspirations and efforts that have gone into bringing us this kind of knowledge. You get to see people from Juno, Galileo, Cassini and New Horizon missions and many more which makes the stories much more accessible because you get to walk with them on their path of discovery when they give you snapshots of what was happening in their minds and in their teams. It was also exciting to hear about future projects such as Mars 2020 (I believe NASA based on the public vote is going to choose a name for it) and Enceladus' planned orbiters. I am, too, happy to be living in the era of "Are We Alone?" quest.
Let's not forget about the song "The Void." It's supremely beautiful.
Thank you BBC for producing this masterpiece and PBS for bringing it to us.
Update: the name is Perseverance and that is what we should all aspire to have.
- Fatemeh_Hadi
- Feb 26, 2020
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