Original Visual Guide
Earlier visual material stays visible inside the main site.
Image loop
This page is made for testing, presenting, and quiet browsing. Start the loop and the site will show image after image in the built-in viewer. You can pause, move back, move forward, or return Home at any time.
What this page solves
Instead of sending a visitor to a plain image file, the site now opens images inside a viewer with close, previous, next, play loop, and Home controls. That keeps the page feeling complete and live.
Earlier visual material stays visible inside the main site.
The home page now uses a looping image story instead of number blocks.
Readers can move into stars, comparisons, and calmer explanations.
Softer picture-led pages stay part of the main site instead of being lost.
The earlier planet posters are still included and explained.
Comparison pages help visitors understand what they are seeing.
The Solar System is the family of worlds that travel around the Sun. Looking at the planets together helps readers compare size, colour, distance, and character in one calm view.
Mercury is the smallest main planet in our Solar System and the closest one to the Sun. It looks rocky, dry, and heavily marked by impacts.
Venus is similar to Earth in size, but its atmosphere is far thicker and hotter. It is covered in dense cloud that hides the rocky surface below.
Earth is our home planet. It stands out because of its blue oceans, white clouds, and the life that fills its surface.
Stars come in many sizes, temperatures, colours, and life stages. This overview gives readers a calm starting point before they open the separate star pages.
A brown dwarf sits between the biggest planets and the smallest stars. It is not a normal shining star like the Sun, but it is more than a planet.
Red dwarfs are small, cool stars compared with the Sun. They burn fuel slowly and can last for a very long time.
A yellow star is a medium star in simple school explanations. Our Sun is often described this way because it gives strong steady light and warmth to the Solar System.
A busy collage of galaxies, glowing discs, and planets that gives young readers a first feeling of space as a huge and colourful place.
A collage full of glowing spheres and star groups that works well for a page about many shapes, lights, and patterns in space.
A set of space scenes with small bright points and spirals that invites quiet looking and simple comparison.
A scene that mixes deep space with a person looking upward, helping children connect astronomy with wonder and imagination.
A calm image that links the night sky with human curiosity and shared looking.
A warm landscape image for pages about discovery, family, and the feeling of starting a journey.
More written explanation
An image loop works best when visitors understand what it is for. This page is not only a technical viewer. It is a presentation page, a testing page, and a way to let readers move through the project without opening every section by hand.
The added text explains that the loop is part of the site structure, not just a separate tool. It keeps the visitor inside the project, gives them a Home route, and lets them pause when they want to read more slowly.
That makes the page stronger for live use. A visitor can watch, stop, open a section, and come back again without the site feeling broken or unfinished.
Why this page helps
This page is useful for demonstrations, quiet browsing, and guided viewing with children or beginners.
Because it now has more explanation, it feels like a complete page rather than only a function.