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Videos I Recommend
Reading is great, but sometimes a good video makes an idea finally click. These are the ones that helped me the most. They're all from trustworthy places - NASA and proper science channels - and I've written why I picked each one. They open on YouTube in a new tab.
Tip: I always read the channel name before trusting a space video. There's a lot of rubbish out there, so I stick to the ones below.
Start here
NASA Launchpad: Life Cycle of a Star
Source: NASA (official)
Why I picked it: it's from NASA itself, so I trust it completely, and it gives a clear overview of the whole life cycle in one go. A perfect first video before you dive into the details.
Stars - Crash Course Astronomy #26
Source: Crash Course Astronomy
Why I picked it: Crash Course explains things at exactly a student level without dumbing them down. This one covers what stars actually are and how they shine, which sets up everything else.
Following a star's life
Low Mass Stars - Crash Course Astronomy #29
Source: Crash Course Astronomy
Why I picked it: this follows a Sun-like star to the end of its life. It's the "Road A" path I describe on my Life of a Star page.
White Dwarfs & Planetary Nebulae - Crash Course Astronomy #30
Source: Crash Course Astronomy
Why I picked it: it explains the quiet ending our Sun will have, and clears up that confusing "planetary nebula" name (nothing to do with planets!).
High Mass Stars - Crash Course Astronomy #31
Source: Crash Course Astronomy
Why I picked it: this is the dramatic "Road B" path - how the biggest stars build elements up to iron and then explode. It really helped me understand why iron is the dead end.
My favourite topic: neutron stars & magnetars
Neutron Stars - Crash Course Astronomy #32
Source: Crash Course Astronomy
Why I picked it: a clear, accurate explanation of what's left after a supernova, and it mentions pulsars and magnetars. Great bridge into my flagship topic.
Neutron Stars - The Most Extreme Things that are not Black Holes
Source: Kurzgesagt - In a Nutshell
Why I picked it: the animation is beautiful and it makes the insane density and magnetism of neutron stars feel real. It's the video that made me fall even deeper in love with this topic.
The Strongest Magnetic Field in the Universe
Source: SciShow Space
Why I picked it: it focuses on magnetars and the mind-bending strength of their magnetic fields. SciShow is a reliable science channel, and this one matches my Magnetars page well.
Channels worth following
If you want to keep learning, these are the channels I trust and check regularly:
- NASA - real missions and discoveries, straight from the source.
- European Space Agency (ESA) - Europe's space agency, lots of great explainers.
- Crash Course Astronomy - a whole course, free, at student level.
- Kurzgesagt - In a Nutshell - gorgeous animations explaining big science ideas.
- SciShow Space - short, reliable videos on space news and topics.
- PBS Space Time - for when you want to go deeper into the hard physics.
A grown-up tip from my mum: always watch with the channel name in mind, and double-check surprising claims against NASA or ESA.