Category Archives: fulldome video

Losing the Dark?

Light Pollution Video Released

All right!  I can finally talk about this project Loch Ness Productions has been working on with the International Dark-Sky Association.  It’s a video called Losing the Dark and it went live today for download today!  It tells the story of light pollution and how we can work together to mitigate it, all in 6.5 minutes. If you run a domed theater (either fulldome or classic), there’s a file for you!  Just visit here at the Loch Ness Productions page for the show to get the version you need (or arrange to get frames if your theater needs very high-resolution frames).

Educators, outreach professionals and others who want to show this program in their classrooms and other venues can download a flat-screen version at the IDA’s Losing the Dark page.

It’s been an amazing project to produce. We worked with visualizers, animators, and photographers from around the world, and both Mark and I did some photography for the show as well. I also wrote the script and supplied the narration for the show, and worked closely with the International Dark-Sky Association on the science behind the script. Mark C. Petersen did the soundtrack and provided his GEODESIUM space music, supplied some time-lapse and still photography, and did the final compositing of the video.

Our support team was huge: I can’t thank Scott Kardel, Dr. Connie Walker, and the members of the IDA Education committee enough for their help and support. We also thank Starmap and the Fred Maytag Family Foundation for their generous support of the project. The International Planetarium Society supplied a seed grant to start off the project, and IDA members have also helped underwrite the costs of production.

Help spread the news about mitigating light pollution and using light only where it’s needed. Otherwise, we are, as the show says, losing the dark of night at the speed of light.

 

 

You Find the Darndest Things in Shopping Malls

Like Planetarium Instruments!

I’m a planetarian.  You know, one of those people who spends time in a domed theater… talking about stars. I’m also a science writer. I write scripts for fulldome shows. And I write books. And astronomy exhibits for such places as Griffith Observatory and the NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory. And this blog. As a writer I wear so many hats that I need a new hatrack to keep them all straight.  But, the thread that ties all my writing together is that it’s about astronomy and space science — and related topics.

Your lovely author, posing with the Zeiss planetarium projector in the Galleria Mall in Jena, Germany. Copyright 2010 Carolyn Collins Petersen

Recently I put on my planetarium fulldome show production hat and went to Jena, Germany for a fulldome film festival. Since my husband and I create fulldome videos, it seemed like a fun thing to do, and we were asked to sit on a jury to select a “best of show”.  On May 3, we landed in Frankfurt, Germany and took the train to Jena, which boasts one of the world’s oldest planetarium theaters, which itselfs boasts the latest in Zeiss planetarium and fulldome projection capabilities.  Jena is the home of the Carl Zeiss company, which creates planetarium instruments, and optics for microscopes and other products. For four days we watched fulldome videos, and when we weren’ t doing that, we spent time exploring that lovely university town.

Our hotel was next to a wonderful shopping mall called the Goethe Gallerie, and as we walked through on the first day, we noticed a slightly different kind of mall ‘art’ display:  a planetarium instrument!  Imagine our great delight at seeing this symbol of an instrument we grew up with in college and spent many years with thereafter.

The fulldome festival was a lot of fun. We got to see 26 professional shows, plus 34 student works. We even got to premiere a clip from a project we’re doing with Dome3D, called SpacePark360: Geodesium Edition. We came home with a lot of refreshed enthusiasm for our productions, and a great appreciation for a town that could display a planetarium instrument in its shopping mall!  Clearly the folks in Jena love and appreciate astronomy!