Create infographic content with this black and white educational poster showing how a rocket reaches space in six clear steps. Clean sans-serif labels, numbered diagrams, and simple orbital visuals give it a friendly, minimal editorial style for kids.
Re-render this exact infographic with every label, heading and caption translated. We re-use all the original attributes (topic, style, palette, …) and only swap the language. Currently in English.
Educational infographic poster titled "How a Rocket Reaches Space" in portrait layout, designed for kids ages 8-12, with sharp readable text labels in clean sans-serif typography. Show a clear vertical sequence with numbered labels 1-6, bold headings, one-line captions, and connecting arrows flowing from bottom to top; include small dotted guide lines and simple legend markers where helpful. Visual style: minimal corporate, monochrome black and white palette, friendly educational mood, high contrast, uncluttered composition, magazine-grade editorial illustration, vector-clean lines, no photographic textures. 1. heading: "1. Rocket on the Pad", caption: "The rocket waits upright before launch.", visual: side view of a launch pad with a simple rocket standing vertically, support tower, tiny smoke vents, flat ground line, and a bold number badge. 2. heading: "2. Engines Ignite", caption: "Powerful engines push hot gas downward.", visual: cutaway at the rocket base showing engine nozzles, stylized flame plumes, exhaust arrows pointing down, and small motion lines. 3. heading: "3. Liftoff", caption: "The rocket rises as thrust beats gravity.", visual: rocket lifting above the pad with a widening exhaust cloud below, large upward arrow beside the rocket, and a small gravity arrow pointing down for comparison. 4. heading: "4. Stage Separation", caption: "Empty lower parts drop away to make the rocket lighter.", visual: midair diagram of a two-stage rocket with the lower booster section separating, dotted split line, small arrows showing parts moving apart, and the upper stage continuing upward. 5. heading: "5. Leaving the Atmosphere", caption: "The rocket climbs past most of Earth’s air.", visual: curved Earth horizon at the bottom, thin atmosphere band shown as layered lines, rocket above the layers, and a simple altitude marker line. 6. heading: "6. In Space", caption: "The spacecraft or satellite begins its mission in orbit.", visual: small satellite deploying from the rocket upper stage, curved orbital path around Earth, a few simple stars, and a circular orbit arrow. Use consistent black line icons, white background, gray accent fills only, simple geometric shapes, clean spacing, and clear sequence numbers in black circles. Add connecting arrows between each stage, with the final arrow curving into orbit around Earth. Keep all diagrams easy to understand for children, with crisp labels and no decorative clutter, no real-brand logos, no copyrighted characters, no identifiable people, no graphic content. All text MUST be written in English (array). Every heading, label, caption, legend and metric name in the image must be in English — not English. Spell each English word correctly using English characters and diacritics. Numbers stay as digits, no watermarks Render labels and headings in clean English typography (sans-serif). No real-brand logos, no copyrighted characters, no people that could be identified, no graphic medical content. If the topic touches a regulated domain (medicine, finance, law), keep the explanation conceptual and add no specific dosages, prices or legal advice.
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