Feeling a little confined to your own piece of Earth these days? We all are, but NASA has put together a vision-expanding package for people and families online and on television. It’s all on a new website called NASA at Home, and it is worth a look.

The new site features videos, podcasts, E-books and virtual and augmented reality tours. Alabama, for example, might like the 2019 E-book “Hubble Focus: Galaxies Through Space and Time” and the virtual tour of Hubble’s command center in Maryland. Hubble was developed at Huntsville’s Marshall Space Flight Center, and few things have changed the way we see the universe as much.

The new site will also feature NASA experts, some doing things you might not expect. For example, astronaut Christina Koch will read children’s books weekdays at 3 p.m. CDT on Instagram live.

“We know people everywhere, especially students, are looking for ways to get out of the house without leaving their house,” Bettina Inclán of NASA’s Office of Communications said today. “NASA has a way for them to look to the skies and see themselves in space with their feet planted safely on the ground, but their imaginations are free to explore everywhere we go.”

The website also offers educational resources and activities for families and students, and it gives “citizen scientists” a way “to contribute to real ongoing research, from our solar system’s backyard to your own backyard,” NASA says. “This includes searching for brown dwarfs and planets in our outer solar system and helping track changes in clouds, water, plants, and other life in support of climate research.”

Meanwhile, NASA Television is running “home-themed programming” 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. weekdays as well as around-the-clock broadcasts about NASA missions.