Otros idiomas:

Stellarium es un planetario de código abierto para su computadora. Muestra un cielo auténtico en 3D, tal como lo que ve a simple vista, con binoculares o un telescopio.

Una estrella fugaz parpadea detrás de Júpiter. Se puede seleccionar diferentes intensidades en la ventana Vista

Una estrella fugaz parpadea detrás de Júpiter. Se puede seleccionar diferentes intensidades en la ventana Vista

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La gran Nebulosa de Orión. Presione N para ver la etiqueta de nebulosa. También se muestran las lineas de constelaciones, presione C para verlas u ocultarlas.

La gran Nebulosa de Orión. Presione N para ver las etiquetas de las nebulosas.

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La danza de los planetas sobre la sede ESO, cerca de Munich

La danza de los planetas sobre la sede ESO, cerca de Munich

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Vista completa celeste de las constelaciones, sus límites, la Vía Lactea.

Vista completa celeste de las constelaciones, sus límites, la Vía Lactea.

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Figuras de constelación activadas

Figuras de constelación activadas

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Haga click en la imagen de la izquierda para ver los detalles.

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paisajes contribuidos del usuario

Tenemos paisajes para los siete continentes (según el modelo de siete continentes), incluyendo a Antártida.

paisajes: Asia

Screenshot not available Angkor Wat, Cambodia 0.9+
Paul Bourke, Peter Murphy N/A English
Angkor Wat, Cambodia
Screenshot not available Bakheng, Cambodia 0.9+
Paul Bourke, Peter Murphy N/A English
Bakheng, Cambodia
Screenshot not available Bayon, Cambodia 0.9+
Paul Bourke, Peter Murphy N/A English
Bayon, Cambodia
Jantar Mantar at Delhi 0.9+
Barry Perlus CC BY-NC-ND 4.0 English
Between 1727 and 1734 Maharajah Jai Singh II of Jaipur constructed five astronomical observatories in west central India. The observatories, or "Jantar Mantars" as they are commonly known, incorporate multiple buildings of unique form, each with a specialized function for astronomical measurement. For more information on these fascinating scientific and architectural works see jantarmantar.org.
Screenshot not available Mount Everest 0.9+
Makc © English
Amazing parorama of the summit of Mount Everest, 8.85 km above sea level. Roddy Mackenzie, who climbed the mountain in 1989, captured the image.
The Jai Prakash Instrument at the Jaipur Observatory 0.9+
Barry Perlus CC BY-NC-ND 4.0 English
Between 1727 and 1734 Maharajah Jai Singh II of Jaipur constructed five astronomical observatories in west central India. The observatories, or "Jantar Mantars" as they are commonly known, incorporate multiple buildings of unique form, each with a specialized function for astronomical measurement. For more information on these fascinating scientific and architectural works see jantarmantar.org.
Jantar Mantar at Jaipur 0.9+
Barry Perlus CC BY-NC-ND 4.0 English
Between 1727 and 1734 Maharajah Jai Singh II of Jaipur constructed five astronomical observatories in west central India. The observatories, or "Jantar Mantars" as they are commonly known, incorporate multiple buildings of unique form, each with a specialized function for astronomical measurement. For more information on these fascinating scientific and architectural works see jantarmantar.org.
Screenshot not available Jantar Mantar 0.9+
Barry Perlus & Stellarium team CC BY-NC-SA 3.0 English
Professor Barry Perlus of Cornell University allowed us to use his panoramic photography of one of the Jantar Mantars in India to create this landscape. For more information on these fascinating scientific and architectural works see jantarmantar.org.
LAMOST 0.9+
John Wei N/A English
The Large Sky Area Multi-Object Fibre Spectroscopic Telescope (LAMOST), also known as the Guoshoujing Telescope is a meridian reflecting Schmidt telescope, located in Xinglong Station, Hebei Province, China.
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