An overview of the Chandra mission and goals, Chandra's namesake, top 10 facts.
Classroom activities, printable materials, interactive games & more.
Overview of X-ray Astronomy and X-ray sources: black holes to galaxy clusters.
All Chandra images released to the public listed by date & by category
Current Chandra press releases, status reports, interviews & biographies.
A collection of multimedia, illustrations & animations, a glossary, FAQ & more.
A collection of illustrations, animations and video.
Chandra discoveries in an audio/video format.
Animations & Video: Chandra Image Collection
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Click for high-resolution animation
1. Best of Chandra Images: 2005 - 2006
QuicktimeMPEG View the remains of massive star explosions, venture toward a supermassive black hole, cruise around dying stars, and more.
[Runtime: 01:09]
(NASA/CXC/A.Hobart)

Click for high-resolution animation
2. Best of Chandra Images: Black Holes, Jets & Quasars
QuicktimeMPEG Black holes are so dense and compact that nothing -- not even light -- can escape. Just outside their grasp, though, black holes can alight galaxies by expelling infalling gas and stars (known as quasars), or generate powerful high-energy jets flowng from spiraling disks that surround them. This video presents some of the best Chandra observations of black holes, jets & quasars.
[Runtime: 1:11]
(NASA/CXC/SAO)

Click for high-resolution animation
3. Best of Chandra Images: Galaxies
QuicktimeMPEG Chandra's X-ray, or high-energy, view of galaxies reveals where the action is in these majestic celestial systems. Supermassive black holes in the central regions power explosive activity that can extend far out into the galaxy. Collisions between galaxies trigger bursts of star formation and multiple supernova explosions that produce vast, billowing clouds of hot gas. Normal stars being devoured by black holes or neutron stars are strung like fiery pearls along the spiral arms of galaxies. Swarms of black holes and neutron stars in otherwise sedate elliptical galaxies show that in the past these galaxies had a tempestuous youth. This video presents some of the best Chandra observations of galaxies.
[Runtime: 1:13]
(NASA/CXC/A.Hobart)

Click for high-resolution animation
4. Best of Chandra Images: Groups & Clusters of Galaxies
QuicktimeMPEG Among the most energetic events in the universe is the merger of groups of galaxies to form giant clusters containing thousands of galaxies. Vast, hot, X-ray emitting gas clouds in the clusters show this process in action. This video presents some of the best Chandra observations of groups and clusters of galaxies.
[Runtime: 0:57]
(NASA/CXC/A.Hobart)

Click for high-resolution animation
5. Best of Chandra Images: Stars & Star Clusters
QuicktimeMPEG Chandra's X-ray observations are useful for understanding how the flaring activity of stars can change as stars evolve, and how the evolution of stars is changed if they are in a close binary system. This video presents some of the best Chandra observations of stars and star clusters.
[Runtime: 0:53]
(NASA/CXC/A.Hobart)

Related Chandra Images:

Click for high-resolution animation
6. Best of Chandra Images: Supernovas & Pulsars
QuicktimeMPEG
*Broadcast Quality

Chandra has provided spectacular examples of the remnants of one of the most dramatic events in the cosmos: supernovas that signal the end of massive stars. This video presents some of the best Chandra observations of supernovas.
[Runtime: 1:05]
(Animation: NASA/CXC/A.Hobart)

Click for high-resolution animation
7. Chandra Two Years (1999 - 2001)
QuicktimeMPEG A collection of images taken by the Chandra X-Ray Observatory within its second year of operation. Some of the images featured include: NGC 4631, Vela Pulsar (Wide-Field View), NGC 7027, Arches Cluster, 47 Tuc, XTE J1118+480 and others.
[Runtime: 01:23]
(CXC)

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