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EDUCATION

Astronomy
Foucault Test Analysis 2.0
The Foucault (pronounced FOO-COH) test is an
optical bench test for evaluating astronomical
mirrors. It is a null test for a sphere (in
other words, it is most accurate and simple in
measuring spherical mirrors), but is also
commonly used to test parabolic mirrors.
Foucault Test Analysis for Windows is a program
for the evaluation of the readings taken in the
Foucault test.
Alcyone Ephemeris 1.0.1
Alcyone Ephemeris is an accurate and fast
astronomial ephemeris calculator covering the
period 3000 BC to AD 3500. It calculates
heliocentric, geocentric, and topocentric
positions of the Sun (Earth), Moon, and planets
in ecliptical, equatorial, and horizontal
coordinates, with optional corrections for
parallax and refraction; rectangular
coordinates, velocity, acceleration, apparent
diameter, magnitude, phase, lunar libration and
more.
Moonphase 2.0
Moonphase - displays the current moon phase of
the current day as an icon in the Activity
field. You can change the time zone, latitude
and longitude (just click on the map!) to get a
more accurate moon rise and set time and also
the sunrise and sunset. A little bonus: If you
like to fish, mark the 'Show good fish days'
option (fishing calendar).
Cartes du Ciel-Sky Charts 2.75
The purpose of this program is to prepare
different sky maps for a particular observation.
A large number of parameters help you to choose
specifically or automatically which catalogs to
use, the colour and the dimension of stars and
nebulae, the representation of planets, the
display of labels and coordinate grids, the
superposition of pictures, the condition of
visibility and more. All these features make
this celestial atlas more complete than a
conventional planetarium.
SETI Monitor 3.42
SETI Monitor is a free add-on for SETI@home. It
allows you to monitor the activity of your
SETI@home client and see what it finds using
virtually no CPU power. SETI Monitor shows the
signals found by your SETI@home client and saves
information about completed work units. You can
see the signals found in your current work unit,
browse through previous results and see the
totals. SETI Monitor is extremely efficient as
it uses less than 0.01% of CPU power. SETI
Monitor also features the easiest to use work
unit caching system for SETI@home in existence.
GrandTour 4.1
GrandTour creates accurate wireframe scenes from
Voyager or Giotto spacecraft, and from space or
Earth (spacecraft visible). User has
considerable control over time, field, etc., and
many frames/second are generated. Developed at
JPL to assist in analysis of science and optical
navigation data, it was also filmed by the
BBC/NOVA for a Voyager documentary. Conveniently
runs from any Windows/DOS.
Planet's Visibility 2.0
Planet's Visibility presents a 3-color graph
that shows when a planet, the moon or the sun is
visible during any year from 3000 BC to AD 6000
at any location on the earth. The vertical axis
marks the months of the year, the horizontal
axis marks the hours of the day. The three
colors create a contour map effect and show
whether the body is under the horizon (black)
and invisible, above the horizon with the sun
(light color) and invisible, above the horizon
without the sun (shaded color) and so possibly
visible. The times of sunrise and sunset can be
shown on all the diagrams.
Celestia 1.4
Celestia is a free real-time space simulation
that lets you experience our universe in three
dimensions. Unlike most planetarium software,
Celestia doesn't confine you to the surface of
the Earth, you can travel throughout the solar
system, to any of over 100,000 stars, or even
beyond the galaxy. All travel in Celestia is
seamless; the exponential zoom feature lets you
explore space across a huge range of scales,
from galaxy clusters down to spacecraft only a
few meters across. A 'point-and-goto' interface
makes it simple to navigate through the universe
to the object you want to visit.
The Nine Planets
The Nine Planets is an overview of the history,
mythology, and current scientific knowledge of
each of the planets and moons in our solar
system. Each page has text and images, some have
sounds and movies, most provide references to
additional related information. Interplanetary
spacecraft have revolutionized planetary
science. Very little of this document would have
been possible without the space program.
Astron 1.0
Astron contains three small programs for
astronomy - A program that converts equatorial
coordinates to horizon coordinates - A program
that calculates the approximate position of the
naked eye planets - A program that calculates
the percent illumination and age of the moon.
Exploring the Sun 2.2
Exploring the Sun implements multi-disciplinary
teaching approaches using NASA technologies to
enhance existing curriculum. This module uses
images from NASA, NOAA, and NSO to explore our
Sun. It uses simple instructions (switches and
buttons) with math to guide students through
basic sun information, two science experiments
and a fun multiple choice test. The information
presented is very basic, but it is made much
more interesting by actual photo images of the
Sun. Our goal is to provide children the
opportunity to learn about our Sun and to be
able to do something they have never done
before. Audience: Grades 6 - 12.
Exploring the Universe 1.0
Exploring the Universe implements
multi-disciplinary teaching approaches using
NASA technologies to enhance existing
curriculum. This module is a reading
comprehension and math lesson from space using
images from the Hubble Space Telescope, ground
photos and other NASA probes to explain the
universe. It also uses extremely simple
instructions (switches and buttons) to guide
students through the solar system, stars,
galaxies and universe. The information presented
is very basic, but it is made much more
interesting by actual photographs and questions
on each subject. Our goal is to provide children
the opportunity to learn about our universe
through observations and to be shown the
benefits of space exploration. Audience: Grades
6 - 12.
The Hubble Space Telescope First Servicing
Mission 2.0
The Hubble Space Telescope First Servicing
Mission is a tutorial which uses NASA images to
describe and explain the servicing mission. This
software package is meant to be a technical
guide containing reference material on the HST.
The software uses extremely simple instructions
(switches and buttons) to guide students through
five topic sections on the HST Servicing
Mission. The information presented is
complicated, but it is made interesting by the
use of actual photos of the Servicing Mission.
Our goal is to provide children the opportunity
to learn about new areas of space science.
Audience: Grades 6 - 12.
Exploring the Earth 2.3
Exploring the Earth implements
multi-disciplinary teaching approaches using
NASA technologies to enhance existing
curriculum. This module is a vocabulary and
geography lesson from space using images from
Landsat and other NASA and NOAA probes. It also
uses simple instructions (switches and buttons)
to guide students through land, sea and air
features visible from space. The information
presented is very basic, but it is made
interesting by actual photographs of surface
images and by trivia questions on each subject.
Our goal is to provide children the opportunity
to learn about our Earth through observations
and to be shown the benefits of space
exploration. Audience: Grades 3 - 8.
Exploring the Solar System 5.1
Exploring the Solar System implements
multi-disciplinary teaching approaches using
NASA technologies to enhance existing
curriculum. This module predominantly uses
images from the Hubble Space Telescope and other
NASA probes to explore our solar system. It also
uses extremely simple instructions (switches and
buttons) and math to guide students through
planets, moons, rings, asteroids and comets in
our solar system. The information presented is
very basic, but it is made much more interesting
by actual photo images of other planets. Our
goal is to provide children the opportunity to
learn about our solar system and to be able to
do something they have never done before.
Audience: Grades 3 - 8
StarCalc 5.6
StarCalc is the fastest professional astronomy
planetarium & star mapping program today. It
illustrates star positions of any instance of
the day observed from any geographic locations
on the Earth. The star positions can be viewed
and presented as images of semispherical whole
sky or any of the user defined sub-areas. These
images can be zoomed at different scales,
rotated, screen-captured and printed. Note: A
number of plugin examples for StarCalc, which
extened it's capabilities available from home
page.
Home Planet 3.0
A comprehensive astronomy / space /
satellite-tracking package. It allows you to
view: An earth map, showing day and night
regions, location of the Moon and current phase,
and position of a selected earth satellite.
Panel showing positions of planets and a
selected asteroid or comet, both geocentric and
from the observer's location. A sky map, based
on either the Yale Bright Star Catalogue or the
256,000 star SAO catalogue, including rendering
of spectral types, planets, earth satellites,
asteroids and comets. Databases of the orbital
elements of 5632 asteroids and principal
periodic comets are included, allowing selection
of any for tracking. A telescope window which
can be aimed by clicking in the sky map or
telescope itself, by entering coordinates, or by
selecting an object in the Object Catalogue. And
more and more and more...
Planet's Visibility 1.2
presents a deceptively simple
3-color graph that tells, at-a-glance, when a
planet (or moon, sun) is visible from your
location. The vertical axis marks the months of
the selected year, with the horizontal axis
marking the 24 hours of the day (in local time).
The three colors create a contour map effect and
identify when the selected object is visible,
not visible, or "eclipsed" by the sun. A fixed
crosshair identifies the current date and time.
By moving the mouse over the graph area, the
date and time, as well as the objects altitude,
azimuth, and magnitude (or the phase of the moon
if the moon is selected)
are displayed.
Planet's Orbits 1.0
This is an accurate digital orrery with a wealth
of functionality. Orbits uses time-dependent
orbital elements for the calculation of
planetary positions (except for Pluto). Good
accuracy is thus obtained for the time range of
+/- 4000 years. The most noteworthy functions
are date specification (past, future), 3D
orbital animation and custom zoom, orbits of
7000+ asteroids, and statistic and information
windows.
Xearth for Windows 1.0
Xearth for Windows is a port
of Kirk Johnson's original xearth program to
Microsoft Windows. Xearth renders a shaded image
of the earth on your desktop, as seen from your
favorite vantage point in space. By default, the
image is updated every five minutes according to
the current position of the sun.
One of the features of xearth is the ability to
place markers on the globe at specific
locations. Xearth comes with 76 locations
built-in. If you know the latitude and longitude
of a city, you can place a marker on your xearth
map.
The source code to Xearth for Windows is now
available!
Sky Screen Saver for Windows 95 2.1
The Sky Screen Saver shows the sky above any
location on Earth, including stars (from the
Yale Bright Star Catalogue of more than 9000
stars to the 7th magnitude), the Moon in its
correct phase and position in the sky, and the
position of the Sun and all the planets in the
sky. Outlines, boundaries, and names of
constellations can be displayed, as well as
names and Bayer/Flamsteed designations of stars
brighter than a given threshold. A database of
more than 500 deep-sky objects, including all
the Messier objects and bright NGC objects can
be plotted to a given magnitude. The ecliptic
and celestial equator can be plotted, complete
with co-ordinates. To fulfill its mission as a
screen saver, the sky map shifts position on the
display every 10 minutes to avoid burning in
those few components of the display which do not
move as the Earth revolves. Installation
Instructions are here.
Stellarium 0.8
Stellarium is a free Open Source planetarium, it
renders 3D photo-realistic skies in real time
with OpenGL. It displays stars, constellations,
planets, nebulas and others things like ground,
landscape, atmosphere, etc. It can be used in
planetarium projectors, just set your
coordinates and go.
Multi SETI@home Monitor 3.1
Msetimon is an OpenSource graphical package to
monitor seti activity that may be running on
multiple computers over a network or multiple
instances on the same computer. If you do not
have multiple PCs Msetimon is great for
Monitoring SETI@home activity for a single
client while saving space on your desktop. It is
the first program to monitor multiple PC's
without having to cross mount file systems and
it now has Boinc support. Rather than slowing
down your cpu with fancy displays, Msetimon
displays only the necessary facts at a glance.
This is especially helpful if you are monitoring
multiple computers that may be running
SETI@home. The main window will give you a quick
look at the progress each of your systems are
making. If you wish to see more information just
left click on the desired PC name or directory
and a detailed work unit screen will appear. A
right click will show the position of that work
unit in the SkyMap.
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