Rob Owen of
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette wrote, "Fascinating and gripping." Alex Strachan of
Calgary Herald wrote, "TV for people who don't normally watch TV." Lynn Elber of the
Associated Press wrote of the episode "
The Fabric of the Cosmos", "Mind-blowing TV."
The Futon Critic wrote of the episode "Looking for Life on Mars", "Astounding [and] exhilarating."
Awards Nova has been recognized with multiple
Peabody Awards and
Emmy Awards. The program won a Peabody in 1974, citing it as "an imaginative series of science adventures," with a "versatility rarely found in television." Subsequent Peabodys went to specific episodes: • "
The Miracle of Life" (1983) was cited as a "fascinating and informative documentary of the human reproductive process," which used "revolutionary
microphotographic techniques." This episode also won an Emmy. • "Spy Machines" (1987) was cited for "neatly recount[ing] the key events of the
Cold War and look[ing] into the future of American/
Soviet SDI competition." • "
The Elegant Universe" (2003) was lauded for exploring "science's most elaborate and ambitious theory, the
string theory" while making "the abstract concrete, the complicated clear, and the improbable understandable" by "blending factual story telling with animation,
special effects, and trick photography." The episode also won an Emmy for editing. The
National Academy of Television Arts and Sciences (responsible for documentary Emmys) recognized the program with awards in 1978, 1981, 1983, and 1989. Julia Cort won an Emmy in 2001 for writing "Life's Greatest Miracle." Emmys were also awarded for the following episodes: • 1982 "Here's Looking at You, Kid" • 1983 "The Miracle of Life" (also won a Peabody) • 1985 "AIDS: Chapter One", "
Acid Rain: New Bad News" • 1992 "Suicide Mission to
Chernobyl", "The Russian Right Stuff" • 1994 "Secret of the
Wild Child" • 1995 "
Siamese Twins", "Secret of the Wild Child" • 1999 "Decoding Nazi Secrets" • 2001 "
Bioterror" • 2002 "
Galileo's Battle for the Heavens", "
Mountain of Ice", "
Shackleton's Voyage of
Endurance", "Why the
Towers Fell" • 2003 "Battle of the
X-planes", "
The Elegant Universe" (also won a Peabody) • 2005 "Rx for Survival: A Global Health Challenge" In 1998, the National Science Board of the
National Science Foundation awarded
Nova its first-ever Public Service Award. ==References==