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单词 planetarium
释义

planetarium


plan·e·tar·i·um

P0349500 (plăn′ĭ-târ′ē-əm)n. pl. plan·e·tar·i·ums or plan·e·tar·i·a (-ē-ə) 1. An apparatus or model representing the solar system.2. a. An optical device for projecting images of celestial bodies and other astronomical phenomena onto the inner surface of a hemispherical dome.b. A building or room containing a planetarium, with seats for an audience.

planetarium

(ˌplænɪˈtɛərɪəm) n, pl -iums or -ia (-ɪə) 1. (Astronomy) an instrument for simulating the apparent motions of the sun, moon, and planets against a background of stars by projecting images of these bodies onto the inside of a domed ceiling2. (Astronomy) a building in which such an instrument is housed3. (Astronomy) a model of the solar system, sometimes mechanized to show the relative motions of the planets

plan•e•tar•i•um

(ˌplæn ɪˈtɛər i əm)

n., pl. -tar•i•ums, -tar•i•a (-ˈtɛər i ə) 1. an apparatus or model representing the solar system. 2. a device that produces a representation of the heavens by the use of moving projectors. 3. the building or room in which such a device is housed. [1765–75; < New Latin, n. use of neuter of Latin planētārius planetary]

planetarium

1. a representation of the planetary system, particularly one in which the movements of the planets are simulated by projectors.
2. a room or building housing such an apparatus.
See also: Astronomy, Planets
Thesaurus
Noun1.planetarium - a building housing an instrument for projecting the positions of the planets onto a domed ceilingplanetarium - a building housing an instrument for projecting the positions of the planets onto a domed ceilingbuilding, edifice - a structure that has a roof and walls and stands more or less permanently in one place; "there was a three-story building on the corner"; "it was an imposing edifice"planetarium - an optical device for projecting images of celestial bodies and other astronomical phenomena onto the inner surface of a hemispherical dome
2.planetarium - an optical device for projecting images of celestial bodies and other astronomical phenomena onto the inner surface of a hemispherical domeoptical device - a device for producing or controlling lightplanetarium - a building housing an instrument for projecting the positions of the planets onto a domed ceiling
3.planetarium - an apparatus or model for representing the solar systemssimulation, model - representation of something (sometimes on a smaller scale)orrery - planetarium consisting of an apparatus that illustrates the relative positions and motions of bodies in the solar system by rotation and revolution of balls moved by wheelwork; sometimes incorporated in a clock
Translations
Planetariumplanetarioпланетарий

planetarium


planetarium,

optical device used to project a representation of the heavens onto a domed ceiling; the term also designates the building that houses such a device. A modern planetarium consists of as many as 150 motor-driven projectors mounted on an axis. As the axis moves, beams of light are emitted through lenses and travel in predetermined paths on the ceiling. The juxtaposition of lights reproduces a panorama of the sky at a particular time as it might be seen under optimum conditions. The motions of the celestial bodies are accurately represented, although they can be compressed into much shorter time periods, allowing spectators to see in minutes the motions that may actually take the celestial bodies days or years to complete. A typical planetarium projects the fixed stars, the sun, moon, and planets, and various nebulae. A larger planetarium can reproduce the Milky Way, comets, and more than 9,000 fixed stars. It may also project a set of coordinate lines for locating objects, in addition to pictures of animals and other forms associated with the constellations of the zodiac. Some projectors can take into account the apparent motions of the stars, thereby depicting the sky as it will look thousands of years in the future or as it looked thousands of years in the past, and the most recent planetariums are capable of showing the heavens as they would appear from the moon and from other locations in space. The first of the modern planetariums was constructed in 1924 by the Carl Zeiss Optical Works in Jena, Germany for the Deutsches Museum in Munich. The Adler Planetarium (1930) in Chicago was the first in the United States, and in 1934 the Fels Planetarium was added to the Franklin Institute in Philadelphia. The Hayden Planetarium, a part of the American Museum of Natural HistoryAmerican Museum of Natural History,
incorporated in New York City in 1869 to promote the study of natural science and related subjects. Buildings on its present site facing Central Park were opened in 1877.
..... Click the link for more information.
 in New York City, was established the following year; in 2000 a new, much more sophisticated Hayden Planetarium was installed in the museum's Rose Center for Earth and Space. By the end of the 20th cent. there were more than 100 major planetariums worldwide and, mainly at schools and colleges, about 1,000 smaller ones.

A mechanical device known as an orrery (for Charles Boyle, earl of OrreryOrrery, Charles Boyle, 4th earl of
, 1676–1731, English nobleman; grandson of the 1st earl of Orrery. He succeeded his brother as earl in 1703.
..... Click the link for more information.
) was a forerunner of the planetarium. It is a framework supporting globes that represent the sun, planets, and natural satellites in their approximate sizes and spatial relations and in their revolutions and rotations. Several orreries were built in the 16th and 17th cent. to explain the Copernican (heliocentric) model of the solar system. Today the orrery finds considerable use as an aid in the teaching of celestial mechanics.

planetarium

(plan-ĕ-tair -ee-ŭm) An optical instrument by means of which an artificial night sky can be projected onto the interior of a fixed dome so that the positions of the Sun, Moon, planets, stars, etc., may be shown and their motions, real or apparent, demonstrated. The instruments were first built by the German firm of Carl Zeiss from 1913. The term also refers to the building housing such an instrument. Originally, planetarium was the name given to the device that later became known as an orrery.

Planetarium

 

(1) An apparatus for projecting images of fixed stars, the sun, the moon, and planets onto a hemispherical domelike screen. The first optical planetarium was designed by the German engineer W. Bauersfeld and was completed in 1924; it was built at the optical works of the firm of Carl Zeiss in Germany. In the 1970’s the Carl Zeiss people’s firm of the German Democratic Republic manufactures three models: the Zeiss Large Planetarium, the Spacemaster for demonstrating spaceflight, and the Zeiss Small Planetarium. Planetariums are also produced in the USA by Spitz, in Japan by Goto, and in the Federal Republic of Germany by Zeiss.

The Large Planetarium has the greatest demonstrative capabilities. It can show all stars down to a stellar magnitude of 6.5. In the present models, the 20 brightest stars have colors corresponding to their spectral classes. The star projectors are globes, one of which projects the stars of the northern celestial hemisphere, and the other the southern. Each sphere has about 16 openings, in which plates made out of metal foil are located. Each plate has up to 200 tiny holes, whose relative positions correspond to those of stars in the sky. The apparatus is also equipped with a Milky Way projector. A globe of smaller diameter projects the names of the constellations. There are also projectors for the sun, the moon, and the five planets visible to the naked eye—Mercury, Venus, Mars, Jupiter, and Saturn. The apparatus has more than 100 projector lamps and a number of electric motors, by means of which diurnal, annual, precessional, and meridian motion can be simulated. Its diurnal motion, which corresponds to the apparent diurnal motion of the celestial sphere, can be accelerated: a rotation can be performed in one to four minutes. The slow shifts of the sun and planets against the stellar background in annual motion can also be speeded up: an entire year can be shown in one minute. The precessional cycle, which in actuality is about 26,000 years, can be acclerated to about 1.5 minutes. Through motion along the meridian the stars can be shown from any geographic latitude on the earth—from the north to the south poles. Special devices project against the stars the celestial equator, the ecliptic, the celestial meridian, and other points and lines of the celestial sphere. There are projectors for auroras, comets, meteors, meteor showers, solar and lunar eclipses, and other celestial phenomena. A schematic diagram of a planetarium projector is given in Figure 1.

Figure 1. Schematic of a planetarium projector: (1) northern and southern globes with projectors for fixed stars, (2) northern and southern globes with projectors for constellation names, (3) Milky Way projectors, (4) projection mechanisms for the sun, moon, and planets, (5) projector for the star Sirius, (6) device for demonstrating solar and lunar eclipses, (7) projector for the celestial meridian, (8) projector for the celestial equator and the ecliptic

When used with the appropriate panoramas, a planetarium can show not only the terrestrial sky, but also the sky as seen from the moon, Mars, or Venus.

The Spacemaster planetarium is capable of showing the celestial sphere as seen from a spacecraft flying on a course inclined at any angle to the equator.

(2) A scientific educational institution at which popular lectures on astronomy, astronautics, and earth sciences are given. The lectures are accompanied by demonstrations of an artificial sky with the sun, stars, planets, satellites, and various spacecraft. Planetariums may also demonstrate auroras, comets, and meteors; solar and lunar eclipses; panoramas of the moon, Mars, and Venus; and the climatic belts of the earth. The projection equipment of the planetarium is used for these purposes.

The first planetarium was set up in Munich in 1925. The first planetarium in the USSR was opened in Moscow on Nov. 5, 1929. In 1974 planétariums were operating in 62 cities of the USSR.

The Moscow Planetarium is the largest center in the country for the popularization of nature science. An important part of the planetarium’s work is the propagandization of the materialist world view and scientific atheism, the analysis and generalization of methods for popularizing natural science, and the creation of unique demonstration devices. Many planétariums have “astronomical areas” equipped with telescopes and other devices for demonstrating various astronomical, physical, and geophysical phenomena. Astronomical clubs are connected with many planétariums; in these clubs schoolchildren learn how to use telescopes and to analyze observations and calculations.

Large planétariums exist in many foreign countries: 26 in North America, seven in South America, 19 in Europe (not counting the USSR), ten in Asia, two in Africa, and one in Australia.

REFERENCE

Bazykin, V. V., and V. K. Lutskii. Moskovskii planetarii, 2nd ed. Moscow, 1956.
Bazykin, V. V., and I. F. Shevliakov. Metodika ispol’zovaniia apparata “Planetarii.” Moscow, 1963.
Portsevskii, K. A. Organizatsiia astronomicheskoi ploshchadki pri planetarii. Moscow, 1970.
Letsch, H. Das Zeiss-Planetarium, 4th ed. Jena, 1955.
Letsch, H. Captured Stars. Jena, 1959.

K. A. PORTSEVSKII

planetarium

[‚plan·ə′ter·ē·əm] (astronomy) A projection device which accurately portrays the position of the stars and planets at any time in the past, present, or future from any point on the earth or the near region of space; the modern planetarium instrument is a mechanical-electrical analog of space. The name given to the building and gear associated with this device.

planetarium

1. an instrument for simulating the apparent motions of the sun, moon, and planets against a background of stars by projecting images of these bodies onto the inside of a domed ceiling 2. a building in which such an instrument is housed 3. a model of the solar system, sometimes mechanized to show the relative motions of the planets

planetarium


  • noun

Words related to planetarium

noun a building housing an instrument for projecting the positions of the planets onto a domed ceiling

Related Words

  • building
  • edifice
  • planetarium

noun an optical device for projecting images of celestial bodies and other astronomical phenomena onto the inner surface of a hemispherical dome

Related Words

  • optical device
  • planetarium

noun an apparatus or model for representing the solar systems

Related Words

  • simulation
  • model
  • orrery
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