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🎨 AI Infographic Generator 🎯 infographic 📅 2026-05-27

Animated Infographics Free Science Animation Poster

Modern portrait infographic explaining how animation works in scientific visuals, with six numbered sections, curved arrows, dotted motion lines, and clean sans-serif labels. This animated infographics free poster uses a soft mint, peach, cream, and muted teal palette for a friendly editorial brand look.

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Portrait educational infographic with 6 numbered science animation panels, arrows, dotted motion lines, and pastel icons.
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Resolution1024 × 1024 px
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Ratio1024x1024
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File size160 KB
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StyleAI Infographic Generator
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Use caseinfographic
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Generated2026-05-27
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LanguageEnglish (EN)
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SEO targetanimated infographics free
Full generation prompt Click to expand
Educational infographic poster titled "How Animation Works in Scientific Infographics" in portrait layout, with clearly enumerated sections and sharp, readable text labels in clean sans-serif typography. Create a modern flat illustration in a pastel soft mint & peach palette with light cream and muted teal accents, friendly educational mood, balanced whitespace, and clear visual hierarchy. Use magazine-grade editorial illustration, vector-clean lines, no photographic textures. Show 6 numbered components arranged vertically with curved connecting arrows and dotted motion lines between panels, plus small sequence numbers in circles.

1. heading: "Frame Sequence"; caption: "A moving graphic is built from many still images shown in order." Visual: a row of 5 small rectangular panels of a bouncing dot, each panel showing the dot in a slightly different position, with a right-pointing arrow underneath.

2. heading: "Motion Illusion"; caption: "When frames change quickly, the eye perceives continuous motion." Visual: an eye icon facing a spinning flipbook-style stack, with dotted trails between repeated positions of a simple atom symbol.

3. heading: "Physics Data"; caption: "Scientific values such as speed, force, or energy can drive the animation." Visual: a simple line graph connected to icons for a rolling ball, a spring, and a wave, with small arrows feeding data into the next step.

4. heading: "Chemistry Changes"; caption: "Animations can show particles colliding, bonding, or rearranging over time." Visual: diagram of colored circles as molecules moving from separated particles to a bonded cluster, with curved arrows and tiny spark icons.

5. heading: "Layered Design"; caption: "Text, icons, and diagrams are stacked in layers to explain each idea clearly." Visual: exploded-layer diagram with transparent panels labeled as title bar, chart layer, icon layer, and background grid, offset slightly to reveal stacking.

6. heading: "Looped Infographic"; caption: "A short repeating cycle makes the final educational animation easy to watch and share." Visual: a tablet-like screen displaying a looping scientific infographic with circular arrows around it, including tiny icons of a beaker, magnet, and orbiting electron.

Include a subtle legend area at the bottom with small icon keys for "Frames", "Data", and "Particles". Use thin arrows, dotted connectors, and motion streaks to emphasize sequence and animation flow. Keep all diagrams simple, accessible, and suitable for the general public. No logos, no copyrighted characters, no identifiable people, no medical imagery. 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.