Science
Astronomy Fact Card Generator
Used by developers, writers, and creators worldwide.
The astronomy fact card generator surfaces surprising, specific space facts across planets, stars, galaxies, black holes, and space exploration — on demand. Select a topic from the dropdown or leave it on Any for a random draw across all categories. Each result is a single, concrete finding: the kind of number or discovery that stops people mid-scroll because it barely seems real. Educators use it to open lessons with something that earns immediate attention. Science communicators use it to fuel post series, newsletter sections, and podcast intros. Curiosity-driven users run it just to learn something genuinely new about the universe. It beats recycling the same five facts everyone already knows.
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How to use
- Choose your options above
- Click Generate
- Copy your result
Detailed instructions
- Open the Topic dropdown and select a specific category — such as Stars or Black Holes — or leave it on Any for a random result.
- Click the Generate button to produce a single astronomy fact card tailored to your chosen topic.
- Read the fact and decide if it fits your purpose; if not, click Generate again immediately to get a different one.
- Copy the fact text using the copy button or select it manually, then paste it into your lesson plan, post, or document.
- Repeat the process multiple times to collect a batch of facts for a quiz, newsletter, or series of social media posts.
Use Cases
- •Opening a middle-school lesson on stellar evolution with a black hole density fact that reframes the entire discussion
- •Writing a week of daily space trivia captions for an Instagram or Threads science account
- •Sourcing a 'Did You Know' hook for each issue of a Substack science newsletter
- •Building a five-question pub quiz round focused exclusively on galaxies or space exploration milestones
- •Creating topic-specific prompt cards for a space-themed museum exhibit or planetarium activity table
Tips
- →Generate five facts on the same topic and pick the one with the most specific number — concrete figures ("1,300 Earths fit inside Jupiter") perform far better than vague claims in both classrooms and social media.
- →Pair a black hole or neutron star fact with a planet fact in the same post to give readers a scale comparison they can mentally visualize.
- →For newsletter use, generate on the Stars topic — stellar facts tend to connect easily to broader themes like life cycles, energy, and time, giving you more to write around.
- →If a generated fact references a specific mission (Voyager, James Webb, Cassini), search that mission name on NASA's website for a free, high-resolution image to accompany the fact.
- →Avoid using facts with very large or very small numbers in isolation for young audiences — briefly add a human-scale analogy (e.g., compare a light-year to laps around Earth) to make the number land.
- →Run the generator on Any topic repeatedly and screenshot a batch — reviewing five to ten facts at once helps you spot a narrative thread or theme for a multi-post series.
FAQ
how accurate are the astronomy facts this generator produces
The facts are grounded in scientific consensus from sources like NASA and ESA, but astronomy figures — exoplanet counts, distance measurements, black hole masses — get revised as new data arrives. For anything you plan to publish or cite, cross-check against a primary source such as a NASA press release or a paper in The Astrophysical Journal.
can I filter facts to only show planets or only black holes
Yes — use the Topic dropdown to restrict results to a specific category: Planets, Stars, Galaxies, Black Holes, or Space Exploration. Leave it on Any to pull randomly across all of them. This is especially useful when you need several consecutive facts on the same subject, like building a quiz round or a themed post series.
can I use generated astronomy facts in a newsletter or social media post
For educational and editorial use, yes — these facts are freely usable. If you're publishing commercially or in an academic context, verify the specific claim against a primary source and attribute it to the originating research or agency. Most well-known astronomy facts trace back to publicly available NASA or ESA mission data.