 Hello, and welcome to our 2020 review. 2020 was a terrible year for everyone around the globe. But astronomers and telescopes, ground-based, satellite, they continued to operate. And they came up with a number of interesting observations and discoveries that we'll cover in this video. We have news on the rings around Saturn. We'll take a look at some of the storms going on on Jupiter. We'll see a new comet, an interesting comet that has two tails. We'll cover Formal Hout B, an exoplanet that disappeared. Beetlejuice has dimmed quite a bit, and that has implications, possibly. You may recall a video where we saw the shadow of a nebula. It was reexamined in 2020, and it's moved slightly, called the bat shadow. So we'll take another look at that. And we'll fly through the Orion Nebula, looking at an invisible light and infrared. A little further out, we'll take a look at a wolf riot star, a fading planetary nebula. And the stars in the Milky Way bulge, trying to figure out how old they might be. We'll also see some spectacular nebula in and around the Large Magellanic Cloud, some distant galaxies, a fading supernova, and a very early galaxy, as seen through gravitational lensing. We'll end with a deeper dive into the James Webb Space Telescope. The new telescope designed for the infrared, the near-infrared, that should launch here in 2021. And we'll cover a few of the things that it will look at, like galactic dust and the first stars that ever formed into the first galaxies. I trust you'll find it informative and entertaining. We'll start with Saturn's rings.