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    "related": [
        {
            "id": 14551,
            "url": "https://svs.gsfc.nasa.gov/14551/",
            "page_type": "Produced Video",
            "title": "The Countdown Is On For The Historic Solar Eclipse On April 8th That Will Sweep Across the U.S. Are You Ready for It?",
            "description": "Scroll down the page for the cut b-roll for the live shots and a canned interview available for easy download || Total_Solar_Eclipse_Banner_4.3.24.jpg (1800x720) [134.2 KB] || Total_Solar_Eclipse_Banner_4.3.24_print.jpg (1024x409) [62.3 KB] || Total_Solar_Eclipse_Banner_4.3.24_searchweb.png (320x180) [32.4 KB] || Total_Solar_Eclipse_Banner_4.3.24_thm.png (80x40) [5.0 KB] || ",
            "release_date": "2024-03-25T06:00:00-04:00",
            "update_date": "2024-04-02T20:49:44.267861-04:00",
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                "alt_text": "Scroll down the page for the cut b-roll for the live shots and a canned interview available for easy download",
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        {
            "id": 14537,
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            "page_type": "Produced Video",
            "title": "One Month Out From The Total Solar Eclipse Live Shots",
            "description": "Included on this resource page are cut broll for the live shots and pre-recorded soundbites with Gina DiBraccio / Deputy Director of Heliophysics, NASA GSFC and Nicholeen Viall / NASA Mission Scientist for PUNCH. Also check out NASA's podcast nasa.gov/curiousuniverse. New episodes coming soon including one about the April 2024 solar eclipse. || Unknown.jpeg (1600x640) [86.5 KB] || Unknown_print.jpg (1024x409) [53.1 KB] || Unknown_searchweb.png (320x180) [35.3 KB] || Unknown_thm.png (80x40) [5.1 KB] || ",
            "release_date": "2024-02-29T12:00:00-05:00",
            "update_date": "2024-03-07T17:13:29.603134-05:00",
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                "filename": "Unknown.jpeg",
                "media_type": "Image",
                "alt_text": "Included on this resource page are cut broll for the live shots and pre-recorded soundbites with Gina DiBraccio / Deputy Director of Heliophysics, NASA GSFC and Nicholeen Viall / NASA Mission Scientist for PUNCH. Also check out NASA's podcast nasa.gov/curiousuniverse. New episodes coming soon including one about the April 2024 solar eclipse. ",
                "width": 1600,
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        {
            "id": 14474,
            "url": "https://svs.gsfc.nasa.gov/14474/",
            "page_type": "Produced Video",
            "title": "A Tour of NASA’s 2024 Total Solar Eclipse Map",
            "description": "On April 8, 2024, a total solar eclipse will cross North America, passing over Mexico, the United States, and Canada. A total solar eclipse happens when the Moon passes between the Sun and Earth, completely blocking the face of the Sun. The sky will darken as if it were dawn or dusk, and those standing in the path of totality may see the Sun’s outermost atmosphere (the corona) if weather permits.A map developed using data from a variety of NASA sources shows the total eclipse path as a dark band. Outside this path, purple lines indicate how much of the Sun will become covered by the Moon during the partial eclipse.This video shows different areas of the map, explaining these and other features that describe what observers across the country can expect to see during the total eclipse. Explore and download the eclipse map here. || ",
            "release_date": "2023-12-08T11:00:00-05:00",
            "update_date": "2024-03-12T15:20:28.927264-04:00",
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                "media_type": "Image",
                "alt_text": "Map Credit: Michala Garrison and the Scientific Visualization Studio (SVS), in collaboration with the NASA Heliophysics Activation Team (NASA HEAT), part of NASA’s Science Activation portfolio; eclipse calculations by Ernie Wright, NASA Goddard Space Flight CenterMusic Credit:  “Cascades” by Air Jared [ASCAP], Sebastian Barnaby Robertson [BMI] via Universal Production Music\rWatch this video on the NASA Goddard YouTube channel.",
                "width": 1280,
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    "sources": [
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            "id": 12165,
            "url": "https://svs.gsfc.nasa.gov/12165/",
            "page_type": "Produced Video",
            "title": "2016 Total Solar Eclipse Live Shots",
            "description": "Solar Eclipse Live Shot Roll-ins || Solar_Eclipse_Rollins_h264_print.jpg (1024x576) [28.9 KB] || Solar_Eclipse_Rollins.webmhd.webm (1280x720) [23.6 MB] || Solar_Eclipse_Rollins_h264.mov (1280x720) [499.9 MB] || Solar_Eclipse_Rollins.mov (1280x720) [1.7 GB] || ",
            "release_date": "2016-03-03T17:00:00-05:00",
            "update_date": "2023-05-03T13:48:50.209065-04:00",
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                "alt_text": "Canned interview with Dr. Michelle Thaller",
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    "products": [
        {
            "id": 14532,
            "url": "https://svs.gsfc.nasa.gov/14532/",
            "page_type": "Produced Video",
            "title": "Different Ways to Safely View a Solar Eclipse",
            "description": "Do you know how to safely view a solar eclipse? There are more ways than one! To protect your eyes while looking at a solar eclipse, always use proper eye protection for solar viewing – such as solar viewing glasses (often called “eclipse glasses”) or a handheld solar viewer – when any part of the bright solar disk is visible. To use telescopes or binoculars to look directly at the Sun, you must install a certified solar filter to the front of the instrument. Don’t have eclipse glasses or other equipment? You can use an indirect viewing method to project sunlight onto another surface and see the shape of the Sun throughout the eclipse. There are many ways you can do this from using materials around your house, tree leaves, or even your hands.To learn more about solar eclipse safety, visit: https://science.nasa.gov/eclipses/future-eclipses/eclipse-2024/safety/ || ",
            "release_date": "2024-02-26T10:00:00-05:00",
            "update_date": "2024-02-23T09:43:24.146529-05:00",
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                "filename": "Thumbnail.jpg",
                "media_type": "Image",
                "alt_text": "Watch this video on the NASA Goddard YouTube channel.Complete transcript available.Music credit: \"Back From The Brink\" by Daniel Gunnar Louis Trachtenberg [PRS], “Hive Mind” by Ben De Vries [PRS] and Cam Tigre [PRS] from Universal Production MusicAdditional footage: NASA EDGESound effects: Pixabay",
                "width": 1280,
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        },
        {
            "id": 13668,
            "url": "https://svs.gsfc.nasa.gov/13668/",
            "page_type": "Produced Video",
            "title": "Cómo ver un eclipse solar de forma segura",
            "description": "Nunca es seguro mirar directamente al Sol, incluso si está parcialmente oscurecido. Al observar un eclipse parcial, debes usar gafas de eclipse en todo momento si deseas mirar el Sol, o utilizar un método indirecto alternativo. Esto también se aplica durante un eclipse total hasta el momento en que el Sol está total y completamente bloqueado por la Luna.Durante el breve período de tiempo en que la Luna oscurece por completo al Sol, el llamado período de totalidad, es seguro mirar directamente al astro rey, pero es crucial que sepas cuándo desviar la vista y volver a ponerte los lentes de eclipse.Primero, lo más importante: busca información local sobre el momento en que comenzará y terminará el eclipse total.Segundo: el Sol también proporciona pistas importantes sobre cuándo la totalidad está a punto de comenzar y terminar. || ",
            "release_date": "2020-12-10T14:00:00-05:00",
            "update_date": "2023-05-03T13:44:25.771707-04:00",
            "main_image": {
                "id": 380720,
                "url": "https://svs.gsfc.nasa.gov/vis/a010000/a013600/a013668/EclipseSafetyVideo_Spanish.00140_print.jpg",
                "filename": "EclipseSafetyVideo_Spanish.00140_print.jpg",
                "media_type": "Image",
                "alt_text": "Mira este video en el canal de YouTube en español de la NASA.Créditos de Música: “Perfect Horizon” por Sam Joseph Delves [PRS] de Universal Production Music",
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            }
        },
        {
            "id": 12903,
            "url": "https://svs.gsfc.nasa.gov/12903/",
            "page_type": "Produced Video",
            "title": "Discovering the Sun’s Mysteriously Hot Atmosphere",
            "description": "Something mysterious is going on at the Sun. In defiance of all logic, its atmosphere gets much, much hotter the farther it stretches from the Sun’s blazing surface.Temperatures in the corona — the tenuous, outermost layer of the solar atmosphere — spike upwards of 2 million degrees Fahrenheit, while just 1,000 miles below, the underlying surface simmers at a balmy 10,000 F. How the Sun manages this feat remains one of the greatest unanswered questions in astrophysics; scientists call it the coronal heating problem. A new, landmark mission, NASA’s Parker Solar Probe — scheduled to launch no earlier than Aug. 11, 2018 — will fly through the corona itself, seeking clues to its behavior and offering the chance for scientists to solve this mystery.From Earth, as we see it in visible light, the Sun’s appearance — quiet, unchanging — belies the life and drama of our nearest star. Its turbulent surface is rocked by eruptions and intense bursts of radiation, which hurl solar material at incredible speeds to every corner of the solar system. This solar activity can trigger space weather events that have the potential to disrupt radio communications, harm satellites and astronauts, and at their most severe, interfere with power grids.Above the surface, the corona extends for millions of miles and roils with plasma, gases superheated so much that they separate into an electric flow of ions and free electrons. Eventually, it continues outward as the solar wind, a supersonic stream of plasma permeating the entire solar system. And so, it is that humans live well within the extended atmosphere of our Sun. To fully understand the corona and all its secrets is to understand not only the star that powers life on Earth, but also, the very space around us.Read more on NASA.gov. || ",
            "release_date": "2018-07-25T14:00:00-04:00",
            "update_date": "2023-05-03T13:46:35.139868-04:00",
            "main_image": {
                "id": 405605,
                "url": "https://svs.gsfc.nasa.gov/vis/a010000/a012900/a012903/CHP_Discovery_1080_4.00001_print.jpg",
                "filename": "CHP_Discovery_1080_4.00001_print.jpg",
                "media_type": "Image",
                "alt_text": "Discovering the Sun’s Mysteriously Hot Atmosphere Something mysterious is going on at the Sun. In defiance of all logic, its atmosphere gets much, much hotter the farther it stretches from the Sun’s blazing surface.Temperatures in the corona — the Sun’s outer atmosphere — spike to 3 million degrees Fahrenheit, while just 1,000 miles below, the underlying surface simmers at a balmy 10,000 F. How the Sun manages this feat is a mystery that dates back nearly 150 years, and remains one of the greatest unanswered questions in astrophysics. Scientists call it the coronal heating problem.Watch the video to learn how astronomers first discovered evidence for this mystery during an eclipse in the 1800s, and what scientists today think could explain it.Music credits: 'Developing Over Time' by Ben Niblett [PRS], Jon Cotton [PRS], 'Eternal Circle' by Laurent Dury [SACEM], ‘Starlight Andromeda' by Ben Niblett [PRS], Jon Cotton [PRS]Coronal spectrum image credit: Constantine EmmanouilidiComplete transcript available.Watch this video on the NASA Goddard YouTube channel.",
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            }
        },
        {
            "id": 12693,
            "url": "https://svs.gsfc.nasa.gov/12693/",
            "page_type": "Produced Video",
            "title": "A Total Solar Eclipse Revealed Solar Storms 100 Years Before Satellites",
            "description": "Eclipses set the stage for historic science. NASA is taking advantage of the Aug. 21, 2017 eclipse by funding 11 ground-based scientific studies. As our scientists prepare their experiments for next week, we're looking back to an historic 1860 total solar eclipse, which many think gave humanity our first glimpse of solar storms — called coronal mass ejections — 100 years before scientists first understood what they were.Scientists observed these eruptions in the 1970s during the beginning of the modern satellite era, when satellites in space were able to capture thousands of images of solar activity that had never been seen before. But in hindsight, scientists realized their satellite images might not be the first record of these solar storms. Hand-drawn records of an 1860 total solar eclipse bore surprising resemblance to these groundbreaking satellite images.Eclipse archive imagery from: http://mlso.hao.ucar.edu/hao-eclipse-archive.php || ",
            "release_date": "2017-08-17T11:00:00-04:00",
            "update_date": "2023-05-03T13:47:25.682531-04:00",
            "main_image": {
                "id": 411950,
                "url": "https://svs.gsfc.nasa.gov/vis/a010000/a012600/a012693/LARGE_MP4-12693_FirstCMEDuringEclipse_large.00139_print.jpg",
                "filename": "LARGE_MP4-12693_FirstCMEDuringEclipse_large.00139_print.jpg",
                "media_type": "Image",
                "alt_text": "Complete transcript available.Music credits: ‘Electricity Wave’ by Jean-François Berger [SACEM] and ‘Solar Winds’ by Ben Niblett [PRS], Jon Cotton [PRS]Watch this video on the NASA Goddard YouTube channel.",
                "width": 1024,
                "height": 576,
                "pixels": 589824
            }
        },
        {
            "id": 12061,
            "url": "https://svs.gsfc.nasa.gov/12061/",
            "page_type": "Produced Video",
            "title": "Eclipse Safety",
            "description": "Learn how to watch the 2017 American Eclipse safely. || BillIngalls_16x9.jpg (1153x649) [267.3 KB] || BillIngalls_1024x576.jpg (1024x576) [227.9 KB] || BillIngalls_1024x576_thm.png (80x40) [7.7 KB] || BillIngalls_1024x576_searchweb.png (320x180) [106.1 KB] || ",
            "release_date": "2017-08-07T12:00:00-04:00",
            "update_date": "2023-05-03T13:47:29.074837-04:00",
            "main_image": {
                "id": 412243,
                "url": "https://svs.gsfc.nasa.gov/vis/a010000/a012000/a012061/BillIngalls_1024x576.jpg",
                "filename": "BillIngalls_1024x576.jpg",
                "media_type": "Image",
                "alt_text": "Learn how to watch the 2017 American Eclipse safely.",
                "width": 1024,
                "height": 576,
                "pixels": 589824
            }
        },
        {
            "id": 12179,
            "url": "https://svs.gsfc.nasa.gov/12179/",
            "page_type": "Produced Video",
            "title": "NASA Jets Chase The Total Solar Eclipse",
            "description": "For most viewers, the Aug. 21, 2017, total solar eclipse will last less than two and half minutes. But for one team of NASA-funded scientists, the eclipse will last over seven minutes. Their secret? Following the shadow of the Moon in two retrofitted WB-57F jet planes. Amir Caspi of the Southwest Research Institute in Boulder, Colorado, and his team will use two of NASA’s WB-57F research jets to chase the darkness across America on Aug. 21. Taking observations from twin telescopes mounted on the noses of the planes, Caspi will capture the clearest images of the Sun’s outer atmosphere — the corona — to date and the first-ever thermal images of Mercury, revealing how temperature varies across the planet’s surface. || ",
            "release_date": "2017-07-25T09:30:00-04:00",
            "update_date": "2023-05-03T13:47:31.667002-04:00",
            "main_image": {
                "id": 412652,
                "url": "https://svs.gsfc.nasa.gov/vis/a010000/a012100/a012179/AmirCaspi_Jets_print.jpg",
                "filename": "AmirCaspi_Jets_print.jpg",
                "media_type": "Image",
                "alt_text": "The two jets will observe the total eclipse for about three and a half minutes each as they fly over Missouri, Illinois, and Tennessee. Credit: Amir Caspi",
                "width": 1024,
                "height": 682,
                "pixels": 698368
            }
        }
    ],
    "newer_versions": [],
    "older_versions": [],
    "alternate_versions": []
}