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Michael and Kimthanh Lê PlanetariumPublic Shows

Public Planetarium Shows


Spring 2024 Slide

Weekly Planetarium Shows

$4 per ticket - Tickets available at the door starting at 6:30 pm.

Love space? Enjoy gazing at the stars at night? Ever wonder what it would be like to fall into a black hole? Find out at our planetarium shows. As always, shows are family friendly and open to anyone. You do not need to be and ODU student to attend.

Our shows typically last about an hour and start with a full-dome movie (schedule listed below). Each movie lasts about 20-25 minutes. Afterwards, we'll show the night sky including planets & constellations, fly through our solar system and visit other planets, traverse the Milkyway, and tour the Universe.

Recommended for ages 4 and up as you never quite know how infants and toddlers will react to a dark planetarium. Some love it. Some do not.


Cash, credit, or debit accepted at the door. Doors open at approximately 6:30.

Shows start at 7:00 pm

No early reservations. Seating is first-come, first-serve.

Check our Location & Parking section for more info.

Full-dome movie descriptions are available below.


February 2024

02/07 - "Black Holes: Journey into the Unknown"

02/14 - Love and the Cosmos

02/21 - "From the Earth to the Universe"

02/28 - The Great American Eclipse

March 2024

03/06 - "5000 Eyes: Mapping the Universe with DESI"

03/13 - "Capcom, Go!"

03/20 - "Forward, to the Moon!"

03/27 - The Great American Eclipse

April 2024

04/03 - The Great American Eclipse

04/10 - "Supervolcanoes"

04/17 - "Climate Change in Our Backyard"

04/24 - "Phantom of the Universe"




Full Dome Movie Descriptions

Black Holes: Journey into the Unknown
Sesame Street - One World One Sky
Birth of Planet Earth
Supervolcanoes


5000 Eyes: Mapping the Universe with DESI

5000 Eyes: Mapping the Universe with DESI

The Dark Energy Spectroscopic Instrument (DESI) is creating the most detailed map of our nearby universe. Installed on the Mayall telescope on Kitt Peak in Southern Arizona, DESI's 5000 independently operated robots can measure the light from millions of galaxies at once. It is currently mapping our Universe at a rate of ~1 million galaxies per month.

Join us as we explore the science, instrument, and people behind this global endeavor and reveal the most detailed galaxy map of our Universe!

Ages 8+

Virginia Standards of Learning Science: PH.9

Birth of Planet Earth

Birth of Planet Earth

Birth of Planet Earth tells the twisted tale of our planet's origins.

Scientists now believe that our galaxy is filled with solar systems, including up to a billion planets roughly the size of our own. The film employs advanced, data-driven, cinematic-quality visualizations to explore some of the greatest questions in science today: How did Earth become a living planet in the wake of our solar system's violent birth? What does its history tell us about our chances of finding other worlds that are truly Earth-like?

Produced by Spitz Creative Media, NCSA's Advanced Visualization Lab, Thomas Lucas Productions, Inc., in association with Tellus Science Museum. This project has been made possible with support from the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania and the Greater Philadelphia Film Office; funded in part by the National Science Foundation.

Ages 8+

Virginia Standards of Learning Science: ES.2, ES.3, BIO.2,

Black Holes: Journey into the Unknown

Black Holes: Journey into the Unknown

Imagine a place where time stands still; where the universal order breaks down; where the unimaginable becomes reality. Welcome to the world of Black Holes.

Narrated by Academy Award winning actor Geoffrey Rush and presenting the latest scientific information, this new planetarium show brings to life all that is fascinating and extreme in the world of black holes. Witness what would happen if you got too close to one? What makes a black hole? How do we find them? Would you survive falling into one?

Discover what science has taught us about these most bizarre creations. Follow their story from an extraordinary idea of the late 18th century through to their unexpected detection almost 200 years later.

Narrated by: Geoffrey Rush

Ages 13+

Virginia Standards of Learning Science: PH.3, PH.7, PH.9,

Capcom, Go! The Apollo Story

Capcom, Go! The Apollo Story

An immersive, historical documentary that showcases the achievements of the Apollo program and what it took to put the first human on the Moon.

It introduces a new generation to the immense challenges they overcame and will inspire them to become the explorers, designers, engineers, thinkers and dreamers of the future.

Ages 8+

Virginia Standards of Learning Science: 6.2, 6.3, ES.2, ES.3

Climate Change in Our Backyard

Climate Change in Our Backyard

As we develop a much larger picture about our Earth as a whole, we are coming to see it as a complex, interconnected, remarkable world, and one that humans have impacted directly. Explore the role of carbon dioxide in our atmosphere, the natural temperature variations that the Earth has experienced over millions of years, and how humans are affecting our planet today. How are scientists learning about our changing climate, and what strategies are people from all across the world taking to protect our future?

Climate Change in Our Backyard illuminates the story of how and why our climate is changing. From the remote mountain shack in the Colorado Rockies, through ancient bubbles in Antarctic ice, and into our own homes. Produced by Fiske Planetarium.

Ages 12+

Virginia Standards of Learning Science: 5.9, 6.9, ES.6, ES.9, ES.10, ES.11, ES.12, PH.5

DARK

DARK

The search for Dark Matter is the most pressing astrophysical problem of our time - the solution to which will help us understand why the Universe is as it is, where it came from, and how it has evolved over billions of years - the unimaginable depths of deep time, of which a human life is but a flickering instant.

We journey through completely immersive visualisations of Dark Matter evolution calculated upon some of the world's fastest supercomputers - cosmological visions on a truly vast scale, in which galaxies themselves are but points of light, distributed across far larger intergalactic structures of Dark Matter.

Ages 13+

Virginia Standards of Learning Science: ES.2, PH.9

Earth, Moon, and Sun

Earth, Moon, and Sun

Explore the relationship between Earth, Moon and Sun with the help of Coyote, an amusing character adapted from Native American traditions. Coyote has many misconceptions about our home planet and its most familiar neighbors. His confusion about the universe makes viewers think about how Earth, Moon and Sun work together as a system and learn to distinguish between myths and science.

Learn the basics of fusion and solar energy and why the Sun rises and sets. Examine the Moon's orbit, craters, phases and eclipses. You'll even take a look at past and future space travel to our Moon ... and beyond!

Ages 5+

Virginia Standards of Learning Science: 4.5, 4.6

Escher's Universe

Escher's Universe

For the first time, see M.C. Escher's use of mathematics, astronomy, optics, crystallography and geometry to artistically explain very complex concepts addressed by Cosmology.

This show will take us to the artist's studio where his most iconic works are displayed. From this intimate and emotional place, we will visit Escher's particular universe and we will be surprised by his unique ability to join Science and Art. We will also explore how Escher's visit to the Alhambra in Spain changed the way he understood universe and had a great impact in his work.

Shapes, three-dimensional reconstructions, dual worlds, unreal buildings or impossible continuities reveal in this show his continuous search of knowledge.

Ages 8+

Extrasolar Planets: Discovering New Worlds

Extrasolar Planets: Discovering New Worlds

We live on a small planet that revolves around a medium sized yellow star. It is just one among many stars that make up the Milky Way Galaxy. And yet, our star is special. It has planets. Are there planets that orbit other stars? If so, are any of them habitable worlds like Earth? If life developed on our planet, could it arise elsewhere? How can we find those other planets?

These are the questions that drive teams of astronomers around the world, on their search for extrasolar planets. This exciting new show describes how astronomers search for planets orbiting other stars.

Ages 10+

Virginia Standards of Learning Science: 6.2, ES.2, ES.3,

Firefall

Firefall

Throughout history, the impacts from comets and asteroids have mercilessly shaped Earth's surface. This film describes objects from meteors - brilliant streaks in the night sky - to mountain-sized boulders hurtling through space.

Ages 10+

Virginia Standards of Learning Science: 5.8, 6.2, ES.2, ES.3, ES.9,

Forward! To the Moon

Forward! To the Moon

Kari Byron from Crash Test World and MythBusters launches us on a journey beyond the Earth towards a sustainable future in space.

NASA's 21st century Artemis program, named after the Greek moon Goddess and twin of Apollo, is the next step in our mission to explore the universe and land the first woman and person of color on the surface of the Moon. Produced by Fiske Planetarium in collaboration with TEND Studio.

Ages 10+

Virginia Standards of Learning Science: 6.2, 6.3, ES.2, ES.3

From the Earth to the Universe

From the Earth to the Universe

From Earth to the Universe is the world's first full-length fulldome planetarium movie freely available for planetarium use. This stunning, 30-minute voyage through time and space conveys, through an arresting combination of sights and sounds, the Universe revealed to us by science. Take an in-depth look through our solar system, fly through our galaxy, see stellar remnants, and tour the Universe beyond the Milky Way.

Ages 8+

Virginia Standards of Learning Science: 4.5, 4.6, 6.2, 6.3, PS.7, ES.2, PH.5, PH.9

Legends of the Night Sky: Orion

Legends of the Night Sky: Orion

This laser show takes a lighthearted and imaginative look at the myths and stories associated with the constellation Orion, the great hunter of the winter sky. The show brings the mythological Orion to life in a fun-filled, animated adventure.


This is a laser based movie. Please consider this if you have a history of seizures or photosensitivity.
Ages 5+

Virginia Standards of Learning Science: K.9

Legends of the Night Sky: Perseus and Andromeda

Legends of the Night Sky: Perseus and Andromeda

Perseus and Andromeda is 18 minutes of full-dome, laser fun, while also teaching children and adults the Greek story about the stars.

This is a laser based movie. Please consider this if you have a history of seizures or photosensitivity.
Ages 5+

Virginia Standards of Learning Science: K.9

Nanocam: A Trip into Biodiversity

Nanocam: A Trip into Biodiversity

Nanocam explores the kingdoms of bacteria, protists and their stunning mechanism of motility, the amazing structure of fungi, the specializations of plants and the incredible complexity of the animal kingdom, seen through an electron microscope -- a breathtaking trip into the five kingdoms of living things. This unique program, based on a scientific approach and featuring images that have never been seen before, offers another dimension of reality, a reality that is measured in micrometers. Nanocam is a fascinating journey exploring life-forms that are invisible to the human eye and contribute to a better understanding of the world we live in.

Ages 10+

Virginia Standards of Learning Science: 3.4, 3.5, 4.2, 4.3, LS.2, LS.3, LS.6, BIO.6,

Sesame Street: One World, One Sky

One World, One Sky

Join Big Bird and Elmo as they explore the night sky with Hu Hu Zhu, a new friend from China. Together they learn how the sky, even in different parts of the world, are still one and the same. They also take an imaginary trip from Sesame Street to the moon, where they discover how different it is from Earth.

Ages 3+

Virginia Standards of Learning Science: K.9

Phantom of the Universe

From the journey of protons racing through the world's largest particle collider in Europe to up-close views of the Big Bang and emergent cosmos, Phantom of the Universe is a new fulldome planetarium show designed to immerse audiences in the search for dark matter. A collaboration of Lawrence Berkeley National Lab, University of Texas at Arlington, Michigan State University, IFIC at University of Valencia, as well as other institutions. Narrated by Oscar-winning actress, Tilda Swinton.

Ages 10+

Virginia Standards of Learning Science: ES.2, PH.9

Sunstruck

Sunstruck

Sunstruck

In this NASA funded show, take a journey to discover the "star" of our solar system (pun intended). While the Sun may be an average star, we want you to be Sunstruck! by just have magnificient it really is. Learn about its mass, composition, and structure. See how the it produces all its light and heat. Discover how it powers itself for billions of years and the next stages of its stellar evolution.

Ages 10+

Virginia Standards of Learning Science: 5.6, 6.4, PS.5, PS.6, PS.7, ES.2, ES.12, PH.5

Supervolcanoes

Supervolcanoes

Supervolcanoes is an immersive planetarium show that looks back at rare classes of eruptions that have marshaled the energy that lurks, like a sleeping dragon, beneath the surface of planet Earth. The program moves beyond Earth to explore the impact of giant volcanic eruptions around our solar system. Audiences will fly down to Neptune's frigid moon Triton, and onto the ultimate volcanic world: Jupiter's moon Io. On a visit to a legendary North American hot spot, Yellowstone National Park, the film asks: can a supervolcano erupt in our time?

Narrated by: Benedict Cumberbatch

Ages 10+

Virginia Standards of Learning Science: 5.8, ES.7, ES.9

The Hot and Energetic Universe

The Hot and Energetic Universe

The Hot and Energetic Universe uses immersive visualizations and real images to present the achievements of the modern astronomy, the most advanced terrestrial and orbital observatories, the basic principles electromagnetic radiation, and the natural phenomena related to the High Energy Astrophysics (HEA).

HEA reveals processes in a hot and violent universe as it probes the hot gas in clusters of galaxies (the most massive objects in the universe) or the overheated gas accreting onto supermassive black holes. The high energy radiation provides important information about our own Galaxy, neutron stars, supernova remnants, and stars like our Sun.


Ages 10+

Virginia Standards of Learning Science: PS.6, PS.7, ES.2, PH.5, PH.9

The Sun: Our Living Star

The Sun: Our Living Star

The Sun has shone on our world for four and a half billion years. The light that warms our skin today has been felt by every person who has ever lived.It is our nearest star and our planet's powerhouse, the source of the energy that drives our winds, our weather and all life. The passage of the Sun's fiery disc across the sky — day by day, month by month — was the only way to keep track of time for countless past civilisations. Discover the secrets of our star in this planetarium show and experience never-before-seen images of the Sun's violent surface in immersive fulldome format.

Ages 10+

Virginia Standards of Learning Science: 5.6, 6.4, PS.5, PS.6, PS.7, ES.2, ES.12, PH.5

Two Small Pieces of Glass: The Amazing Telescope

Two Small Pieces of Glass: The Amazing Telescope

Follows two students as they interact with a female astronomer at a local star party. Along the way, the students learn the history of the telescope from Galileo's modifications to a child's spyglass - using two small pieces of glass - to the launch of NASA's Hubble Space Telescope and the future of astronomy. Aiming to engage and appeal to audiences of all ages, the show explores the wonder and discovery made by astronomers throughout the last 400 years.

Ages 10+

Virginia Standards of Learning Science: 5.6, PS.7

Unveiling the Invisible Universe

Unveiling the Invisible Universe

For thousands of years the humans observed the light coming from the night sky with their eyes. In the beginning of the 17th century, the invention of the telescope by Galileo revolutionized our knowledge of the Universe. Finally, in the 20th century with the advent of rockets, it became possible to go above the earth's atmosphere and observe X-ray and gamma ray radiation which are the marks of the hot and violent Universe. But it is not only light that can give us information about the cosmos. Neutrinos and cosmic rays also provide vital information. Finally, the detection by the LIGO experiment of gravitational waves from two merging black holes opened a new window in astrophysics.

Ages 8+

Virginia Standards of Learning Science: 4.5, 4.6, 6.2, 6.3, PS.7, ES.2, PH.5, PH.9



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