COSMIC CANVAS: STELLAR EVOLUTION PROGRAM GUIDE

Introduction

Exploring the Universe through Art and Astronomy

Artist's concept of the binary star system HM Sge on the black background of space sprinkled with various sizes of red and white points of light. At the top of the image, a blazing hot white disk surrounds a white dwarf star that is pulling a stream of material from its red giant companion, the glowing mottled ball at bottom right.
This artist’s concept shows two stars known as HM Sagittae, where a white dwarf star is pulling material from its red giant star companion. Credit: NASA, ESA, Leah Hustak (STScI)

The Cosmic Canvas: Stellar Evolution Program Guide invites youth-adult pairs to discover the amazing lives of stars through creative, hands-on activities that blend art and science. The guide can be run as a full 90-minute program, or as standalone activities – including a Warm Up, Explore, and Create! activity. Participants will observe, interpret, and create models like scientists and artists do while learning how scientists understand how stars begin, age, and end their lives.

Activities include: 

The guide is designed for facilitators of all backgrounds and includes science background information, helpful links, and tips for adapting activities – no science expertise needed.

Introducing NASA’s Universe of Learning’s Cosmic Canvas Program Guides

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Astronomy and the Arts: How are they connected?

Callout“The link between art and science for me is my love of color and my love of light.”

-- Dr. Nia Imara (astrophysicist and artist)End callout

In astronomy, the process of scientific inquiry mirrors the creative journey of art-making in many ways. Just as artists observe, interpret, and reflect the world through music, painting, sculpture, and writing, scientists observe the cosmos, interpret data, and create models to understand its many mysteries. Artistic expression, scientific illustration, and modeling play pivotal roles in exploring the universe and conveying ideas, particularly when faced with the unknowns of the vast and challenging-to-observe universe. 

In this program guide, participants will practice skills used in both science and art-making while learning about the life cycles of stars, known as stellar evolution.

How to Use This Program Guide

This guide enables facilitators to lead an approximately 90-minute program. It is structured in three sequential sections, each approximately 30 minutes in length:

  1. Warm up: Participants are introduced to and practice skills used in both art and science. We recommend choosing one of the two warm-up activities to lead. 
  2. Explore: Participants engage with scientific topics and discoveries around the lives of stars. 
  3. Create!: Participants apply the concepts and skills learned/practiced earlier in the program to explain and communicate new ideas through art-making.

Accordions

Warm up

The Warm up activities are designed to engage participants and ignite their creativity and curiosity. These activities get each youth-adult pair thinking and discussing ideas just like artists and scientists do, encouraging them to explore the intersection of artistic expression and scientific inquiry.

CalloutNote: There are two Warm up activity options. Choose one option that works best for your group:

End callout

Learning Concepts (for both activities)

Participants will learn that detailed observation, curiosity, analytical thinking, evidence-based reasoning, generating hypotheses, and communicating ideas are critical parts of both art and science. 

Time (for either activity)

  • Preparation: about 15 minutes 
  • Activity: about 30 minutes 

Observe, Think, Wonder (Warm up Option 1)

This activity adapts the “See, Think, Wonder” routine to guide participants through practicing skills both scientists and artists use when seeking to understand why something looks, sounds, and feels the way it does or is the way it is.

Warm Up 1

Cosmic Stories (Warm up Option 2)

This activity enables participants to practice making observations and conveying ideas while creatively crafting a poem, short story, or song about astronomical models, tactile plates, sonifications, and/or images. It is adapted from NASA’s Universe of Learning’s Astropoetry.  

Warm up 2

Explore

An upright bookmark template with a colorful astronomical image on the left and text on the right. The left side features a vibrant image of the Cat's Eye Nebula, an intricate celestial cloud with a central blue-green eye-like structure surrounded by expanding pink and purple gas layers. The text "CAT'S EYE NEBULA" is in large white letters at the top of this side, and "NASA'S UNIVERSE OF LEARNING" logo is at the bottom. The right side is a gray panel with the heading "LIFE CYCLE OF A SUN-LIKE STAR". Below the heading, there's a list of seven stages, each marked by a colored circle (bead) and a brief description:  Purple: "A cloud of gas and dust collapses due to gravity, forming a protostar." Pink: "Gravitational energy powers the protostar. A protoplanetary disk forms around it." Yellow: "Nuclear fusion begins in the star’s center, starting the main sequence phase. Our Sun is in this phase." Red: "The star expands into a red giant when the hydrogen in its center runs out." Orange: "The star loses mass as nuclear processes occur inside." Green: "The star sheds its outer layers and forms a planetary nebula, a cloud like the one on this bookmark!" Lilac: "Material shed during the star's life is recycled in clouds of gas and dust, and the cycle starts again." At the bottom right, there is a QR code and the website "UNIVERSE-OF-LEARNING.ORG".Construct a Star Life Cycle Bookmark

In this activity, participants learn about the life cycle of stars and how the evolution of a star depends on its initial mass. Participants will create a bookmark that represents the stages of a star’s life cycle.

Learning Concepts: 

Participants will learn that: 

  • Stars are born from clouds of gas and dust. 
  • Stars have a life cycle. 
  • A star’s life cycle depends on its mass. 
  • Astronomers study the lives of stars by observing many different stars at different points in their life cycles. 

Time: 

  • Preparation: about 15 minutes 
  • Activity: about 20-30 minutes 

Activities to Explore

Create!

Watercolor painting of a star-forming nebula against a black tabletop. The nebula is a distorted oval that has a roughly circular blue and green center with a few stars, some with diffraction spikes. The immediate surrounding area is orange with some sections of green. In the lower left of the nebula is a gray cavernous area. The edges of the painting show the dark background of space with stars.
This watercolor painting of a star-forming nebula was created by a participant who drew inspiration from a real telescope image of the Helix Nebula. Note that the participant used crayon to create a wax-relief effect for the stars in the background.

Paint a Star-forming Nebula

In this activity, participants will examine real telescope images of star-forming nebulae and will be led through a painting exercise to depict these beautiful star-forming regions based on how stars, gas, and dust interact inside these dynamic environments.

Learning Concepts: 

Participants will: 

  • Have fun exercising their creativity to create a painting. 
  • Build understanding of the forces that shape star-forming regions. 
  • Practice communicating ideas through art-making. 

Time: 

  • Preparation: about 15 minutes 
  • Activity: about 40 minutes 

Activities

Background Resources

Resources by Type

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