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Stellarium mobile planetarium
Stellarium mobile planetarium




stellarium mobile planetarium
  1. #STELLARIUM MOBILE PLANETARIUM FULL#
  2. #STELLARIUM MOBILE PLANETARIUM PORTABLE#
  3. #STELLARIUM MOBILE PLANETARIUM SERIES#

Just point your phone at the sky, and you can recognize stars, constellations, planets, comets, satellites (such as the International Space Station), and other deep sky objects in the sky above you in real-time in seconds!

stellarium mobile planetarium

#STELLARIUM MOBILE PLANETARIUM FULL#

Ask about full dome videos to enhance your experience.Stellarium Mobile Plus-Star Map is a planetary application that accurately shows what you see when looking at the starry sky.$600 for full day, up to 8 thirty minute shows.$350 for half day, up to 4 thirty minute shows done every 45 minutes.Great way to educate students about upcoming total solar eclipse taking place on August 21st, 2017.

#STELLARIUM MOBILE PLANETARIUM PORTABLE#

30 minute interactive tour of the night sky with Dan Glomski, longtime astronomer in new portable planetarium.Visitors were invited to see the planetarium, view the Sun with special telescopes and participate in other Sun-related activities. The planetarium made its public debut during its Preclipse event held Aug(exactly one year before the eclipse). “The portable planetarium will definitely help us do that.” “Interest in the eclipse will be incredibly high, and we want to make sure people are ready for it,” Glomski says. The Edgerton Center is working with Hall County Convention and Visitors Bureau, Aurora Area Chamber and Development Corporation, NASA Nebraska Space Grant and other organizations to promote viewing this extremely rare event from central and eastern Nebraska.

#STELLARIUM MOBILE PLANETARIUM SERIES#

The planetarium will be part of a series of educational activities and events centered around the Augtotal solar eclipse, the path of which crosses Nebraska. “We already visit over 150,000 people at schools and libraries across Nebraska and into northern Kansas, and a portable planetarium will make the program even more attractive.” “We couldn’t be more excited to have one of these for Edgerton on the Move,” adds Edgerton Executive Director Mary Molliconi. “They’ve come a long way in the last few years.” “Many people may remember a portable planetarium from back in grade school days, crawling through a tunnel to see dim dots for stars,” says Edgerton educator and “mad scientist” Dan Glomski. The entire system can be set up in 30 minutes. Visitors enter the dome walking in, and the dome is wheelchair accessible. With a diameter of five meters, the inflatable dome will have enough room to seat a class of 25 students. From a computer, images are projected using a video system equipped with a fish-eye lens. of Bremerton, WA, uses Nightshade, a version of the popular freeware astronomy Stellarium ( ) to depict the sky. The planetarium, made by Digitalis Education Solutions, Inc. and Norma Heuermann Foundation Fund, Heuermann Family Trust Fund, the Get R Done Foundation, Woodard Trust, Southern Power, Hamilton Telecommunications and an anonymous donor. The planetarium was purchased using funds granted by several generous donors, including B.K. The planetarium will be capable not only of showing the daytime and nighttime sky but also prerecorded full dome planetarium shows. The Edgerton Explorit Center has purchased and received a portable planetarium to add to its extensive offering of Edgerton on the Move (EOTM) programs and field trip offerings.






Stellarium mobile planetarium