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The People – Native American Mythology
45 min
The legends of the Indians are out
of a past older than anyone knows. They are simple legends born of
the ways of people who have lived as brothers and sisters with all of nature's
creatures. Their roots are one with the land. All peole who
have ever lived on this beautiful earth have legends--stories of men who
lived for greatness and beauty. If these legends were to die,
surely something within the people would die with them. This program
presents the mythology and sky lore of the American Indian. "The
People" is an interweaving of the astronomical stories and knowledge of
the first Americans, revealing the special relationship they felt with
nature. The narration, artwork, and music are based on American Indian
styles. |
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Adventures Along the Spectrum (4th - adult)
30 min
From rainbows to distant stars and
galaxies, light floods our Universe. Ranging from radio waves to gamma
rays, at 186,000 miles per second, light is the fastest thing there is.
But, what is light? Let bumbling Professor Photon unravel this mystery
for you as he explores the properties of the electromagnetic spectrum in
this light-hearted and informative program. This entertaining show
will introduce you to the various regions of the electromagnetic spectrum.
With Professor Photon, you can learn about radio, radar, microwave, infrared,
visible, ultraviolet, x-ray, and gamma waves, and their importance in exploring
our universe today. On this journey, you'll discover pulsars and neutron
stars, super novas, active galaxies, black holes, and quasars. |
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Hubble Vision (5th-Adult) 34 min
Starting with the 1990 launch and deployment,
we document Hubble's initial troubles and bad press, followed by the success
of the First Servicing Mission. The show then explores the Hubble universe
-- from nearby planets out to the edge of the cosmos. Included are the
astounding images from Comet Shoemaker-Levy 9's crash into Jupiter; views
of Mars, Saturn, and Pluto; proplyds in the Orion Nebula; rings around
Supernova 1987a; and jets shooting from active galactic nuclei, powered
by black holes. Using uncomplicated explanations, the show gives everyone
a look at Hubble's optical discoveries as well as its achievements in ultraviolet
spectroscopy. |
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A Solar System Adventure Tour (3-6th Grade)
This program is a participatory Solar
System presentation for use with middle-elementary age students. The program
allows students to become mission specialists while their spaceship takes
them on an educational adventure past the sun, moon and planets of our
Solar System (fellow crew members shown above). Upon entering the planetarium
students are given one of three mission cards: Planet Specialist, Math
Expert or Flight Engineer. During the flight the captain asks for information
from a specific mission card. Upon this request, the student holding the
card enters the data into an imaginary remote computer, which they are
told ties into the main computer system. The information they think they
supplied is timed to magically appear as data on the dome. The emphasis
on astronomy education concepts combined with the participatory nature
of the presentation give students a fun and interesting planetarium experience.
Students often cheer at the end when they proudly complete their mission.
**Group
sizes must be at least 15.
Click Here for more
information and study guide |
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Zubenelgenubi's Magic Sky (Preschool -
2nd) 25 min
Come to the SMSU Planetarium and meet
Zubenelgenubi (Pronounced Zoo-Ben-El-Jen-New-Bee), or simply Zubee.
Zubee will introduce your child to the wonders of the day and night sky.
While Zubee wanders around the audience, other characters will pass by
on the dome. These characters include Ms. Moon, Mr. Sun, Hydro the
Fire Hydrant, and Tracy the Telephone Pole. "Zubenelgenubi's
Magic Sky" is a fun, highly interactive program which introduces concepts
such as "length of a day," "lunar phases," "constellations," "stars," and
"planets." The show concludes with a fun twist on the ancient Cassiopeia/Andromeda
legend. |
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Winter Wonders (Family) 45 min
"Winter Wonders," is a new program
at the Southwest Minnesota State University Planetarium that examines events
meant to brighten the winter solstice--the time of year when the noontime
sun is lowest in the sky. Audiences will listen along with characters
Jackie and Michelle as they learn about Christian and Jewish holidays during
this time of year. “Winter Wonders” asks what the star over Bethlehem might
have been. Possibilities explored include meteors, supernovae, comets,
and planetary gatherings. We also look at why Christmas is celebrated
on December 25th. The audience will learn about other solstice celebrations
around the world and look at some of the light-hearted traditions such
as gift giving, decking halls with greenery, and candles. The program includes
solstice customs from central Africans, Chinese, Native Americans, Inuit
and Incas. It concludes by looking at some of the monuments built by prehistoric
peoples to honor the winter solstice. |
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Welcome To The Universe (5th - Adult)
10 min
Welcome To The Universe is a short
program that treats its audience to the full wonders of the planetarium
and the universe. It takes you on an outward journey which briefly
covers early people and the stars, constellations, the Moon, the planets,
stars, star clusters, galaxies, and clusters of galaxies. This show
is normally used as a pre-show followed by the short version of More
Than Meets The Eye. |
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Ring World (5th - Adult)
Stunning Saturn is about to be visited
by the Cassini spacecraft. After its nearly seven year sojourn, the
spacecraft will spend another four years investigating the alluring planet,
its many moons, and spectacular system of rings. The Cassini mission
also includes a probe set to land on Saturn's largest moon, Titan.
Prepare yourself for exciting discoveries and new views of Saturn to come. |
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The Explorers (5th - Adult)
When Captain Cooke explored the
Pacific ocean basin he expected to find a vast emptiness and unexplored
land. Instead Cooke found people with a common ancestory and language scattered
across 12,000,000 square miles of the open ocean. How could the Polynesians
have settled all of these islands? How could they have sailed more than
2,400 miles to the islands of Hawaii without the benefit of the tools (sextants,
chronometers, maps and compasses) used by the European explorers?
This show focuses on the human spirit of exploration throughout time and
space. The dome's starry sky is used to identify constellations, to observe
what daily motion can tell us about way finding, and to study changes in
the sky as the observer's latitude changes. During a live section
in the program, the audience will get a chance to use their new knowledge
to navigate from Tahiti to Hawaii with the same techniques Polynesians
have used for thousands of years. Then join the crew of mankind's
first voyage to the planet Mars as they use the same stars to guide them. |
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The Explorers of Mauna Kea (5th - Adult)
40 min
Exploration starts with Hawaii's Mauna
Kea, the highest point in the Pacific Basin, 14,000 feet above sea level,
to where astronomers use the world's biggest telescopes to study the universe.
Find out about the Hawaiian legends that explains geological facts including
the movement of the mid-Pacific plate toward northern Asia.
Meet Pele, the goddess of fire and volcanoes at Mauna Loa,
and Poli 'ahu, the goddess of snow at white capped Mauna Kea. Then
climb to the top of Mauna Kea to gaze at and the sky through the world's
most powerful telescopes. We also discover weather inversions
that keep clouds and dust below Mauna Kea's summit and the skies clear
on the mountain for so many nights. Leading astronomers expose
you to supernovas, comets, galaxy formation, extra-solar planets, and more.
Each show has a live interactive section where the audience gets a chance
to simulate how the mirrors of the giant Keck telescopes work! |
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Galaxies (7th - Adult) 38 min
Galaxies takes us into space, on a
cosmic journey through the stars of the Milky Way and the galaxies beyond.
Conveying science within the framework of nature, Galaxies is presented
as a nature walk on the grand galactic scale. Looking at Earth's
night sky, we see a major spiral galaxy--the Milky Way--from within, then
travel out to Alpha Centauri, the Pleiades star cluster, and the globular
star cluster M3. The voyage of discovery continues through intergalactic
space past the Andromeda Galaxy, the glittering star fields at the center
of the Virgo Supercluster, and the lonely dwarf galaxies that sail the
dark waters of intergalactic space. |
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Skywatchers of Ancient Mexico (7th - Adult)
55 min
The Mayan, Aztec, Olmecs, and other
civilizations of ancient Mexico were deeply concerned with the heavens.
Their understanding of astronomy surpassed that of the Europeans.
In this program we discover what these peoples saw in the heavens and how
it affected their architecture, calendars, and religious beliefs.
We also investigate the affects of the arrival of Europeans. (For
example, in only 60 years 90% [23 million] of the Meso-American people
were killed.) The Mesoamerican Indians established a highly advanced
culture and constructed temples and other monuments that rivaled the pyramids
of ancient Egypt. Many of the ancient religious sites built in what
is present day Mexico by the Olmec, Toltec, and Mayan civilizations show
significant alignments with the heavens. |
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The Dawn of Astronomy (7th - Adult) 51
min
For almost 5,000 years the pyramids
of Egypt have stood guard near the banks of the Nile. Almost 5,000
years ago the megaliths of Stonehenge began to appear on England's Salisbury
Plain. Through the centuries these man-made monuments have withstood
earthquakes, wars, tourists, robbers, neglect, and natural decay.
As an Arab proverb says: "All things dread time, but Time dreads the Pyramids."
To erect such massive, "timeless" monuments, early man must have been intelligent
and resourceful. But why build them at all? What was their
purpose? In the SMSU Planetarium's star program The Dawn of
Astronomy, we journey back in time to discover why the pyramids and Stonehenge
were built. Visitors will see the splendor of the newly raised pyramids
and watch as the Sun rises over the Heel Stone at Stonehenge. The
incredible achievements of early man in measuring the length of the year,
developing a concept of the zodiac, and predicting exactly how the Sun
and Moon move in the sky are celebrated in The Dawn of Astronomy. |
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The Wright Way to Fly
This program celebrates the centennial
of flight. It tells the story of the Wright Brothers' initial interest
and methodical efforts that led them to be the first to fly a heavier than
air machine. It describes their kites, gliders, flyers, and wind tunnels,
In addition, it emphasizes the fundamentals of flight. |
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Springtime of the Universe 45 min
Fifteen billion years ago our universe
began in a fantastic explosion. The stars and galaxies - all that
we see about us - are the cooling remnants of that beginning. What
lies ahead for the Earth and Sun? The stars? The universe itself?
Discover the answers in "Springtime of the Universe." This program
recreates the birth of the universe in time-lapse form and shows in moments
what took billions of years to develop: the galaxies, the stars, and even
our Sun and its planets. |
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Footsteps
"That's one small step for man...One
giant leap for Mankind."
Footsteps tells the story of two
worlds, the Earth and the Moon, and of man's fascination through the ages
with our nearest neighbor. Journey 4.5 billion years into the past to witness
the formation of the Earth, and its smaller pockmarked companion, from
an immense cloud of gas and dust. Explore many of the myths from around
the world that have sought to explain the Moon and its ever changing appearance
in our sky. Finally, witness science fiction become reality as mankind
journeys to the moon to take its first footsteps on this distant world. |
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Cosmos: The Voyage to the Stars 45 min
This show was written by the late Dr.
Carl Sagan. Cosmos is about the human exploratory vision; about how
we have come, in only a few thousand years, from projecting our hopes and
fears up there among the constellations to visiting the planets and setting
sail for the stars. We follow the exploration of Mars from childhood
dreams in the nineteenth century to the spectacular realities of the Viking
mission. We follow the course of the Voyager spaceships to the outer
solar system. And we retrace the evolution of matter from interstellar
gas and dust to stars and planets. Join Dr. Sagan on a personal journey
through space and time. Through the lavish use of special efects,
Cosmos will explore the intriguing possibilities of black holes, alternate
universes, time travel, communication with extraterrestrial civilations,
the lives of the stars and galaxies, the future of the Earth, and the deepest
questions concerning the origin and fate of the universe. We will
travel with Dr. Sagan through the universe containeed within a tiny cell,
across two thousand years to the ancient Library of Alexandria, and to
the point of embarkation for all our cosmic journeys: the human brain. |
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