You'll see images of the Milky Way as you rotate the globe, all captured by the European Southern Observatory. Since you're looking at our planet from the outside, you'll be able to see the stars as they'd appear to someone that's 30,000 miles above the planet. And that sounds awesome if you ever wanted to play space explorer as an adult.

Google says adding stars to Earth is part of its efforts to make the program look as realistic as possible, which is why it also previously added animated clouds to show weather patterns around the world. "Realism is important to us," program software engineer Jonathan Cohen wrote. "[W]e want people using Google Earth to see our planet in context with our place in the universe."