The cosmos, finally within reach.
Explore the solar system in real time. Read the stories behind the science. Understand our place in the universe — no physics degree required.
Start with the clearest paths.
Each card is now a short editorial preview. Open any one to read the full explorer page with the concept, instructions, and what to notice before the live experience is connected there.
Milky Way Tour
Move through spiral arms, stellar neighborhoods, and the larger galactic frame with a clearer sense of where the Solar System sits inside it. The detailed page sets up the scale cues and reading logic before the visual experience begins.
Cosmic Timeline
Follow the universe from early plasma to galaxies, stars, planets, and observatories in a sequence designed to stay readable rather than abstract. The guide page explains the structure, milestones, and how the timeline will be navigated.
From the universe, for the curious.
Ulugh Beg and the Observatory That Changed Astronomy
In 1424, a Timurid ruler built a 40-meter sextant in Samarkand and catalogued 1,018 stars with an accuracy Europe wouldn't match for two centuries.
What the James Webb Telescope Actually Sees
It doesn't take photos like your phone. Webb captures infrared light and translates it into color — here's what that process looks like, and why it matters.
Why Time Slows Near a Black Hole
Einstein predicted it in 1915. We proved it with a white dwarf and its companion star. Here's the intuition behind gravitational time dilation.
The Pale Blue Dot: What Voyager Taught Us
In 1990, Carl Sagan asked NASA to turn Voyager 1 around. The photograph it took is still the most humbling image ever made.
Gravity Waves: How We Heard a Billion-Year-Old Collision
In 2015, two black holes collided 1.3 billion light-years away. The ripple reached Earth and moved a mirror by less than a proton's width.
The Fermi Paradox: Why Haven't We Heard Anyone?
The universe is 13.8 billion years old and contains trillions of stars. The silence is either the most terrifying or most interesting fact in science.
“The universe is under no obligation to make sense to you. But understanding it anyway — that’s the whole point.”— AELVOX Journal, Tashkent Read the journal →