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Worlds of Wonder
Worlds of Wonder
investigates the exciting
discoveries about the planets, moons, and other worlds of the Solar
System
made during the last two decades. Beyond the familiar nine planets,
Worlds
of Wonder explores some of the sixty moons, thousands of asteroids, and
billions of comets that add mystery and adventure to out continuing
investigation.
You'll discover the constantly erupting volcanoes of the violent moon
Io,
as seen by the Voyager spacecraft. You'll see the monstrous Martian
volcano
Olympus Mons, dwarfing any on Earth; and delve under the obscuring
orange
clouds of the moon Titan to discover its bizarre methane oceans. |
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Planet Patrol: Solar System
Stake-Out
(3rd - 8th) 39 min
Join Sam Snork, P.I.
(Planetary Investigator)
and his assistant Elmo as they try to find the source of disturbing
radio
emissions coming from a nearby solar system. The solar system happens
to
be our own and Sam and Elmo visit all the planets in it looking for the
radio source. They learn all about these amazing planets, and finally
end
up at Earth, where the radio noise is coming from. After commenting on
the amount of pollution they found on Earth, they return to their home
planet Nork, amazed at the diversity of planets they have seen. |
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Moon Witch (2nd - 5th, family)
17 Min
All around the world,
people
have imagined seeing all sorts of strange things and faces in the
moon...
Earthshine is sunlight bouncing off of the earth, and shining down on
the
moon, and then bouncing off the moon, and back to our eyes...
This
planetarium production examines the nature of the moon and its changing
appearance in the sky. On Halloween we meet Billy and Diana, a brother
and sister who are trick-or -treating. Diana notices that no matter
where
she goes the moon seems to follow. Back home, Mom and Dad explain moon
appearance and motion. Diana continues to share her new
knowledge
of the moon with her teacher and classmates and demonstrates why the
moon
goes through faces or phases. |
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Cosmic Catastrophes (5th -
Adult) 44 min
We investigate what sort of
disasters
could befall the Earth from space. It is widely accepted that large
asteroids
have hit the Earth in the past. The evidence suggests that this type of
event might have caused the extinction of many life forms on Earth
including
the dinosaurs. Comets and asteroids have hit the Earth as
recently
as 100 years ago. Also investigated are the greenhouse effect,
fluctuations
of the Sun, and the comet that hit Jupiter in 1994. The program also
includes
a brief tour of the other planets in our solar system. |
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The Endless Horizon
What sparks the torch of
exploration?
Is it the dream of distant shores, wealth, or power? Exploration
is motivated by all of these factors, but often it is for the pure joy
of scientific discovery. The Endless Horizon traces
exploration
through the ages, as mankind has ventured over land and sea in search
of
the unknown. Now we stand upon the shores of a vast cosmic ocean,
our sailing ships are rockets and space probes gathering information,
helping
to give us a better understanding of our Universe. This
show
chronicles major exploratory feats of Columbus, Captain James
Cook,
Lewis and Clark, and their significance in human history.
Narrated
by Patrick Stewart, the show also discusses those who explored beyond
the
Earth - Kepler, Newton, and Galileo. The more recent explorations
of James Maxwell, the Wright Brothers, Konstantin Tsiolkovski, and
Robert
Goddard give an historical perspective to the events that paved the way
for the modern exploration of the planets and universe. Learn of
the past and present efforts of the greatest explorers the human race
has
known. |
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To Worlds Unknown 55 min
The new frontiers of the
Solar System
are explored as we take a "grand tour" of the planets. The Space
Shuttle
carries us into orbit for a rendezvous with a giant spaceship about to
set forth on a mission which will include flybys or landings on all the
planets. Come journey to the planets in our solar system.
See
the spectacular surface of Mars with its 17-mile-high mountain and
3,000-mile-long
canyon. Experience the incredible volacones on a mooon of
Jupiter.
Rediscover the planets and moons of our solar system as NASA space
probes
have revealed them. |
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Starbound 55 min
Prologue: Once upon a
time... In
a galaxy not so very far away... There existed a creature strange, With
an insatiable thirst for knowledge. Now this is the peculiar
part: The more it learned, the less it knew... For with every answer,
came
another question. Now this is the beautiful part: Of all
the
creature's thirsts, This one... brought him closest... to the
gods.
It has been said that when
man
loses his desire to explore, the human race will have sounded its own
death
knell. If this is true then we have every reason to be optimistic
about the future, for we live in the greatest age of exploration man
has
ever seen. Columbus had his Queen Isabella, his Nina, Pinta, and
Santa Maria. We have our NASA and the dozens of spacecraft which
have pushed back our frontiers almost to the limits of
imagination.
While practically everyone is famliar with the planetary space craft
explorers:
the Vikings, the Voyagers, the Pioneers... the general public is
relatively
unfamiliar with the star craft explorers which have given us a New View
of the Universe, a New Astronomy. "STARBOUND" shows you this
other
side of NASA, and a newly revealed Universe that is spellbinding and
awesome,
bizarre, and wonderful. This lavish production is an overview of
man’s progress in learning about the heavens. It begins with an
exciting
photomontage of current accomplishments in space. Next, there is a
review
of some of the bright constellations throughout the seasons. This leads
to a chronological unfolding of the tools man used to reach his present
state of knowledge of the universe and some examples of those exciting
– and sometimes bewildering – discoveries. Galaxies, pulsars, black
holes,
and mysterious quasars are examined. (Written by: J. F.
Horkheimer) |
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First Light
Using today's most powerful
telescopes
astronomers study the turbulent atmospheres of planets and their exotic
moons; watch as stars are born and die violent deaths as white dwarfs,
neutron stars, and black holes; follow the paths of the galaxies
through
our expanding universe. In First Light we trace the history of the
telescope
and explore the amazing universe that the telescope has unveiled.
Discover
why today's space-based telescopes, in particular the newly repaired
Hubble
Space Telescope, continue to open new vistas in our quest for distant
starlight. |
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ALL SYSTEMS GO! (Grades 5 and
up) 43 min
The story of NASA from its
inception
to the development of the Space Shuttle, with emphasis on the Apollo
manned
missions to the moon. |
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Stellar Evolution 20 min
In Stellar Evolution the
audience soon
learns that stars are not eternal, that like all living things, they
have
a beginning and an end. The program begins with an examination of the
late
autumn, early winter sky, where variable stars such as Delta Cephei,
Mira,
and T Tauri, are examined. Exploration of M-45, The Pleiades and M-1,
the
Crab Nebula reveal the existence of young stars being born and old
stars
dying. The show then demonstrates how stars are formed, and their
eventual
ultimate fate, which is dependent upon one thing! Their mass.
This
show illustrates what happens in the interiors of stars according to
Chandrasekhar's
Nobel Prize winning work which includes shell burning and
nucleosynthesis.
The program ends with the comment, "Look at the stars, what do you see
now?" |
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A Comet Called Halley 43 min
This most famous of comets
returns
to our solar neighborhood on a regular basis. Named for Sir
Edmond
Halley, Halley's Comet has created stirs for those that lived in
communities
in the past. Audiences get to know more about the history and
science
of comets. A Comet Called halley combines history, science,
spectacular
visuals, and a captivating musical score. Babylonian astronomers
believed comets journeyed in the realm of the planets. Greek
philosophers
debated whether comets belonged to the domain of the heavens or the
Earth,
and Aristotle's idea that comets were atmospheric phenomena dominated
Western
thought almost two thousand years. Comets were blamed as the
cause
of floods, plagues, and disasters. Scientist Tycho, Kepler,
Newton,
and Halley shaped the history of comet science with their pioneering
work.
It was Halley who forecast: "...the comets of 1531, 1607, and 1682
adhere
to orbits of striking similarity... I therefore conclude that it is but
a single comet, observed on three occasions, and predict its next
return
in 1758." On Christmas night, 1758, the comet did indeed return in
triumph
of Newton's laws of motion and gravitation and Halley's study of comet
orbits. |
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The Stellar Thread
The DNA molecule is the
part of us
that spans generations. Found within the cells of nearly all
living
things, DNA can make copies of itself to create us, maintain us, and
pass
our biological traits to our offspring. "The Stellar Thread"
shows
that scientists are learning to reshape this fundamentalunit of life,
ordering
microorganisms to make products of great value, such as the human
insuline
hormone. |
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The Loneliness Factor
The first messages have
already been
sent. Man is trying to communicate with beings on other
worlds.
What makes us think there is life beyond the Earth? What would it
look like? Could they understand our messages? Could they
travel
to our planet? Join the search for life beyond the Earth in "The
Loneliness Factor." |
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Islands in the Sky 45 min
Early oceanic navigators in
the Pacific
traveled thousands of miles in tiny canoes, from island to island, to
inhabit
new lands and spread theunique island cultures that compose Melanesia,
Polynesia, and Micronesia today. This incredible migration
resulted
from detailed knowledge of the Sun, winds, waves, animal life, and the
simple, practical use of the stars as a compass to guide early
travelers.
Planetarium audiences will enjoys "Islands in the Sky" with its
colorful
and informative presentation that takes them to the enchanting Pacific
Islands. |
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Voyager 2 at Uranus (Grades 5
and up)
14 min
In January of 1986, the
Voyager 2 spacecraft
encountered the planet Uranus and gave us a fascinating look at the
seventh
planet, its contingent of moons, and dark, mysterious rings. Voyager 2
At Uranus presents highlights of this exciting mission, and was created
with technical guidance from Dr. James Warwick, Voyager Radio Astronomy
Experiment Principal Investigator. The show recaps Voyager's previous
encounters
with Jupiter and Saturn, then highlights the discoveries about Uranus:
its unusual polar tilt, atmosphere, and magnetic poles; the Uranian
ring
system, and the five major moons. It ends with a description of the
extended
Interstellar Mission, and the gold-plated record's sounds and images of
Earth. |
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Saturn Before Voyager... and
After
Overview of Voyager mission. |
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Comet Halley: Once in a Lifetime
Halley's Comet, the most
famous of
all comets, last visited the inner solar system in 1986. Halley
returns
to the inner solar system on an average of every 76 years, thus linking
human generations across a lifespan. The comet is called Halley
to
honor Edmond Halley, the 18th century English scientist who was first
to
recognize that comets travel in predictable orbits about the sun.
For centureis comets were objects of fear and superstition. When
Comet Halley paid a call in 1910, Americans sealed their doors and
windows,
and bought gas masks and "comet pills" as protections against the
"noxous
vapors" as a portion of Halley's tail swept across the Earth.
Today
we know that comets are "dirty snowballs," pristine material left over
from the birth of the solar system and that Halley's Comet is less than
4 miles in diameter yet it developed a gaseous coma larger than Jupiter
and a tail 50 million miles long. |
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Back Seat Astronomy 20 min
This show gives a look at
the summer
skies. This show opens with Roger, Lulu and Lulu's kid brother
pulling
up at the local drive-in movie. Lulu's curiousity about why so
few
stars are seen over the city, even with clear weather, ushers in the
arrival
of the "caped wonder," Captain Science, who has been cruising the
drive-in
"unmasking fuzzy thinking and proposing cosmic truth" (and collecting a
fair share of black eyes). A well-timed power failure darkens the
sky and invites our friends to take notice of the splendors of the
summer
skies, while partking in the splendors of the drive-in refreshment
stand. |
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Innerspace (6th - Adult) 31 min
This innovative
presentation takes
viewers on a riveting journey inward, into the vast and mysterious
universe
of the human body. Just as traditional planetarium shows use a
panoramic
format to illuminate the unseen expanse of the cosmos, InnerSpace
brings
viewers face-to-face with the hidden realms inside our own bodies.
Spectacular
closeup views provided by cinemicrography, fiber optics, electron
micrography,
and other diagnostic tools reveal the micro-landscapes of the body in
heart-stopping
detail. The presentation also combines video, three-dimensional
animation,
and other media that help to immerse audiences in this unfamiliar
environment.
Audiences travel through the skin, into arteries, and throughout the
body
to become eyewitnesses to a host of fascinating processes, including
the
delicate interplay of neurons and the workings of the genetic code.
InnerSpace
also documents the battle for health that rages daily on the inner
frontier
as the body fights off invisible invaders and genetic mutations from
within.
The presentation shows not only how the immune system wages war against
parasites, bacteria, and viruses, but also how medicinal interventions
-- everything from vaccines to cutting-edge techniques like gene
therapy
-- can boost the body's natural defensive powers. |
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