Sowetan

Space travel so real you can touch stars

Planetariu­m also a scientific tool

- By Bobby Jordan Cape Town

The universe is expanding‚ but so is our capacity to be bamboozled by it.

Cape Town’s new Iziko planetariu­m and digital dome allows visitors to travel through Saturn’s rings‚ skim past the Hubble Telescope and race to the outer reaches of the universe‚ all in the comfort of a reclining chair.

“Armchair travel to the furthest reaches of the universe is now possible‚” said Iziko Museums chief executive Rooksana Omar‚ who spoke at a media preview of the upgraded planetariu­m adjoining the Company’s Garden.

“The very latest technology has been installed‚ making it unique on the African continent‚” Omar said.

Instead of gazing up at a simulated South African night sky‚ visitors are now treated to a digital extravagan­za of shooting stars‚ planets‚ black holes and spiral galaxies thanks to a multimilli­on-rand investment in cutting-edge‚ high-definition visual technology. A series of laser video projectors simulate space travel in eye-popping detail‚ in some cases using actual images of celestial objects.

Pluto appears in graphic detail‚ complete with mountain ranges and a wide glacier field. The lights of Cape Town become a pinprick in galactic space as the camera pans out to take in a broad sweep of the solar system. Significan­tly‚ the technology can also simulate other unlikely destinatio­ns‚ such as the inside of an atom‚ the human brain or the depths of the ocean.

The museum’s bosses hope to foster scientific collaborat­ion and exploratio­n by turning the planetariu­m into a scientific tool as well as a visitor centre.

By putting data into the facility’s computers‚ scientists can use the 140-seater dome to visualise number sets‚ such as those generated by the Southern African Large Telescope in Sutherland or the Square Kilometre Array radio telescope near Carnarvon in the Karoo.

“Some data sets can be understood only if you can see them and see them big. Modern science is about cooperatio­n. This takes it to a new level‚” said Bongani Ndhlovu‚ Iziko’s executive director of core functions.

The upgrade‚ which cost more than R30-million‚ continues a proud tradition of galactic gazing at the 60-yearold planetariu­m‚ which is now among an elite group of planetariu­ms with the new “8K” visual technology – with resolution about 24 times that of a normal high-definition screen.

 ?? / PHOTOS / RUVAN BOSHOFF ?? The opening of the new 4D planetariu­m by Iziko Museum in Cape Town.
/ PHOTOS / RUVAN BOSHOFF The opening of the new 4D planetariu­m by Iziko Museum in Cape Town.
 ??  ?? The internatio­nal space station as projected at the opening of the refurbishe­d 4D planetariu­m.
The internatio­nal space station as projected at the opening of the refurbishe­d 4D planetariu­m.
 ??  ?? Rocky rings around Saturn.
Rocky rings around Saturn.
 ??  ?? View of the universe.
View of the universe.
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