Embark on an extraordinary cosmic journey with Leo, a curious young explorer who receives a golden ticket to the stars. From the rumbling countdown of a rocket launch to floating among the planets, this beautifully illustrated book blends the magic of space travel with the wonders of science, seasons, and ancient cultural wisdom. It's a breathtaking adventure that will inspire young minds to look up at the night sky and marvel at our place in the universe.
A heavy knock echoes through the house, and Leo opens the front door to find a mysterious, glowing envelope waiting on the porch. Inside, a shiny paper shimmering with an official golden seal announces that Leo has been selected for a special program to journey into outer space.
Strapped tightly inside the cockpit of a massive rocket ship, Leo feels a thousand butterflies fluttering wildly in his stomach as the final countdown begins. With a tremendous roar and a flash of bright orange flames, the rocket blasts off, shaking the ground as it pushes toward the sky.
The roaring engine fades into absolute silence as the rocket pierces through the clouds, and the sky outside shifts from brilliant blue to a deep, velvety black. Leo unbuckles his seatbelt and instantly floats up toward the ceiling, laughing as he flips gently in the zero-gravity cabin.
Peering out the massive glass window, Leo gazes at the twinkling stars scattered across the dark like glittering diamond dust. He traces the lines of ancient constellations, realizing that although these eighty-eight patterns look close together from Earth, they are actually light-years apart in the vastness of space.
Looking back at the beautiful blue planet, Leo watches Earth rotate on its tilted axis while revolving around the glowing sun. He reflects on how this gentle dance creates the four familiar seasons of spring, summer, autumn, and winter across the northern and southern hemispheres.
Leo remembers the ancient Noongar people, who tracked six distinct seasons by listening to the language of the land rather than a calendar. From the scorching heat of Birak to the rainy winter of Makuru, they observed the behavior of animals and the blooming of plants to live in perfect harmony with nature.
The rocket drifts past the glowing Moon, allowing Leo to admire its shifting phases as it orbits Earth on a slight tilt. He watches the silver light transition from a thin waxing crescent to a magnificent, glowing full moon, all carved by the light of the distant sun.
Leo visualizes the invisible tug-of-war of gravity, the universe's greatest magnet, which keeps the Moon orbiting Earth in a smooth, oval path. He observes how the combined gravitational pull of the sun and moon creates the dramatic high tides of the spring tide and the gentle, narrow waters of the neap tide.
Gazing closer at the Earth, Leo notices the subtle twenty-three point five degree tilt that brings life and rhythm to the world below. He marvels at how a single twenty-four hour spin creates day and night, while a full journey around the sun marks a whole year of life and growth.
Suddenly, a shadow falls over the spaceship as the Moon moves directly between the Sun and the Earth, creating a breathtaking solar eclipse. Leo watches the sun's fiery crown glow in the darkness, knowing that his spectacular space journey has forever changed how he views his beautiful home in the cosmos.
생성 프롬프트(전체 프롬프트를 보려면 로그인하세요)
Knock, knock, knock A letter is at your door, you open it, you have been selected for a special program to go to space to look at our place in space! Your heart skips a beat the shiny paper in your hands glows with an official seal. This isn’t any ordinary trip you are going to space! Now you are in the rocket ship, it feels like there are 1000 butterflies in your stomach trying to escape, you hear it, the countdown begins. 3, 2, 1 BLAST OFF The rocket rushes through the clouds until the sky slowly fade to black, you are now in space. Wen you unbuckle your seatbelt you immediately start floating up to the roof, you can see the twinkling stars out the window like glitter. But something else catches your eye, its earth our home, but your space journey is just beginning. Constellations In our night sky we have 88 official constellations, and a constellation is a recognised pattern of stars in our sky. Did you know while the stars in a constellations look close together in reality they are really far away. Seasons On earth we have four seasons, summer, autumn, spring and winter, this happens because when our earth is rotating around the sun different hemispheres our facing the sun. So, when the Northen hemisphere is facing the sun, its summer there but winter in the southern hemisphere, but sometimes on hemisphere isn’t always facing the sun, that’s when autumn and spring occur. Noongar seasons On earth we also have other seasons such as noongar seasons which the first nations people used. They are just as accurate as our seasons, but instead of 4 seasons they have six. Birak, December and January, which align with the summer solstice, the longest and hottest days of the year. Makuru is the opposite, being in June and July it the winter solstice with the shortest days. There is also Djeran April, and may which follows the autumn equinox which is where the Sun is positioned exactly above the Earth's equator, resulting in nearly equal hours of daylight and darkness worldwide. Similar to that there is Djiba august and September the spring equinox. So, they are very similar to our seasons, but they have go two more! Bunuru February and march, this follows the summer solstice and kambarang October and November, which is just the solar acceleration leading up to the summer solstice. Those seasons are a lot more detailed but sound much more difficult to explain. Moon phases We are heading past our moon now; we can see what phase the moon is in. Moon phases are caused by the light from the sun falling on the moon as it orbits earth. The moon moves counterclockwise around our earth on a slight tilt. It takes around 27 days for our moon to rotate around the earth. Did you know that the stages of our moon have names, there are 8 stages: new, crescent, quarter, gibbous, full moon, waxing and waning. A new Moon occurs when the Moon lies directly between the Sun and the Earth, causing its illuminated half to face away from us while its shadowed side faces Earth, but A full Moon occurs when Earth lies between the Sun and the Moon, allowing the entire sunlit side to face us Tides Think about the largest invisible magnet in the universe that’s gravity! Everything in the sky, from huge stars to tiny moons, has invisible gravity! When a smaller thing in the sky gets near a bigger planet, then the gravity of the bigger thing starts to grab on to the smaller thing. The smaller thing tries to fly away, but the bigger thing always keeps tugging at it, so that it never stops going around it in an oval motion this is called an orbit. The moon and sun even play tug of war with the Earth and its oceans, creating the gravitational pull of the oceans’ tidal action. Two times every month, there is a strong tidal force called a spring tide in our oceans and despite being called spring tide it doesn’t just happen in spring, it happens all year round. Twice a month, the Sun, Earth, and Moon form a giant square corner in space. When the Moon is in its half-moon phase, it pulls the ocean one way, while the Sun pulls it another way. Because their gravity powers clash, they cancel each other out. This creates a neap tide, where the difference between high water and low water is very small and narrow. Rotation and revolution When passing our earth, you may be able to see that our earth is slightly tilted on an angle of 23.5˚ degrees. Our earth takes 24 hours to complete one rotation, so one day, but every 365 days the earth revolves around the sun. Noongar Calendar The way seasons are defined in our culture include indicators like temperature and rainfall. But for Noongar peoples, it was more lived experienced, throughout time noticing changes like the changes of animals or the growth of plants, seeing how things changed over time. Eclipses Eclipses are caused when the light from the sun is blocked by a celestial body such as earth or the moon. There are two different types of eclipses lunar eclipse and solar eclipse. A lunar eclipse is when