 Have you ever had an a-ha moment? That feeling when everything just seems to make sense. Scientists have them all the time. Hi, I'm Jim Green, NASA's Chief Scientist, and I have discovered many new things in my career. And let me tell you, there's nothing quite like that feeling when you discover something important that no one in the world knows. What if I told you that through NASA's Citizen Science program, you too can experience that same feeling? Are you interested? Citizen scientists working with NASA have made many significant discoveries, some of them right from their own home. For instance, 54,000 Circumstallar disks have been found by citizen scientists. What are they? These are debris fields around stars in our galaxy where planets are being formed for the very first time. What about the citizen scientists that have discovered 18,000 mosquito breeding sites in NASA Earth science images? Breeding sites like these are important to first flying, since mosquitoes carry all sorts of diseases. So there are many other discoveries going on in NASA's Citizen Science projects. And you can get involved. These projects are real collaborations between scientists and an interested public, like you. I am sure some of you might be saying, well, I don't have a fancy degree, or I can't discover new planets beyond our solar system, and you'd be wrong. You don't have to have a special degree or job title. In fact, you don't even need to have experience. If you're curious about our universe and about our planet Earth, you can get involved with real NASA projects and work alongside real scientists right now. So what are you waiting for? Come on and join us. To get started, go to science.nasa.gov slash citizen science. See you there.