How to install landscapes
After you have downloaded the .zip file for a landscape from this page, you need to install it in Stellarium.
Automatic
If you have Stellarium 0.10.6 or later version, you can use the "Add/remove landscapes" feature to install landscapes automatically:
- Open the "Sky and viewing options" window by clicking on the appropriate button in the left button bar (or press the F4 key).
- The "Add/remove landscapes" button is at the bottom of the "Landscape" tab.
- When you press it, the "Add/remove landscapes" window will appear. It allows you to install .zip files containing landscapes. It also lists the user-installed landscapes and allows you to remove them.
Note that while this makes installing landscapes easier, it may also cause you to overlook what else is included in the ZIP archive. Landscape packages created without this feature in mind may contain other files, such as alternative textures in different sizes.
Manual
If you are using an earlier version of Stellarium, you can follow this procedure to install a landscape package:
- Browse to your User Data Directory, which varies according to your operating system. (eg. in Windows Vista/7 enter %appdata%\stellarium in Explorer's location bar )
- Create a sub-directory called landscapes in your user directory (if it doesn't exist).
- Unzip the landscape .zip file in the landscapes directory (if it's done right, a sub-directory should be created for each landscape).
NOTE: Older version of Stellarium (prior to v0.9.0) used a slightly different mechanism for doing landscapes. You can find a list of the old landscapes here.
Since version 0.10.5 Stellarium has problems in correctly loading old style landscapes (multi panel) if they are not 8 or 16 panel panoramas. Some old 4,7,9 qnd 10 side panoramas converted into 8 ides can be found here
- [1] (Wiruna field Barry's site)
- [2] (Egarden 8 panel Barry's site)
- [3] (Como area Sydney Barry's site)
User contributed landscapes (by continent)
We have landscapes for the seven continents (in the seven continent model) - all, including from Antarctica !
Interplanetary
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Husband Hill, Mars
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Johan
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Public Domain
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0.9.x
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| Johan transformed this Mars image from NASA into a spherical panorama that can be used with Stellarium. Mars rover Spirit made this image during August 24 to 27, 2005. Image credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech/Cornell. Read more on this webpage.
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Mars Opportunity Rover
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Mike
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Public Domain
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0.9.x
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| Mike sent posted this landscape in the forums. Another nice Mars rover landscape.
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International Space Station
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Makc
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GPL
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0.9.x
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| Landscape made using some screen shots and data from the wonderful Celestia. Set the projection mode to stereographic, zoom out to a wide field of view and point down towards the ground to get the nice rounded "planet" effect.
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Apollo 11 landing site
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Mathew Myrup
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N/A
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0.9.x
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| This landscape is made using NASA photographs taken by Buzz Aldrin. Look down and you can see Buzz's footprints :)
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Apollo 17 landing site
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Mathew Myrup
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N/A
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0.9.x
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| This landscape is made using NASA photographs taken by Gene Cernan.
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Africa
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Cap Masoala, Madagascar
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Matthias D. Frei
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GPLv2+
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0.9.x
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| This panorama was photographed from the abandoned French lighthouse at the southernmost point of the Masoala peninsula in Madagascar. It provides a spectacular view over the Indian Ocean and the Masoala peninsula that is still mainly covered with rainforest. More information about this particular place can be found here
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Mbabane, Swaziland
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Quinton Reissmann
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N/A
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0.9.x
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| Mbabane is the capital of the little kingdom of Swaziland. Waterford/Kamhlaba is an international school on a mountain side which prides itself in cultural diversity. In SiSwati "kamhlaba" means "a world in miniature". The actual view is from the sports field where we usually set up the telescope.
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Asia
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Mount Everest
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Makc
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©
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0.9.x
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| 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.
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Jantar Mantar
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Barry Perlus & Stellarium team
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CC BY-NC-SA 3.0
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0.9.x
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| 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.
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Australasia
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Transit Hill, Lord Howe Island, Australia
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Graeme Ewing
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N/A
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0.9.x
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| Graeme Ewing Contributed this panorama of the astronomically significant and visually stunning Transit Hill site Northeast of Sydney, Australia.
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Penneshaw, Kangaroo Island, Australia
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Clive Nelson
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N/A
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0.9.x
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| Penneshaw is a small township at the Northwest end of Kangaroo Island, off the coast of South Australia. In the north is the entrance to Gulf St Vincent and the Australian mainland. In the east is the Penneshaw township, To the west, on the horizon, is Kingscote, the main town on Kangaroo Island.
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Largs Bay in South Australia
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Martin Lewicki
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GPL
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0.9.x
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| Panoramic view of Largs Bay in South Australia 8 panel old style landscape. Largs Pier Hotel facade in SSE and Largs Bay Sailing Club due east. Jetty extends to Gulf St Vincent to the west.
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Europe
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Épendes Observatory, Fribourg, Switzerland
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Nicolas Martignoni
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CC BY-NC-SA 3.0
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0.10.x
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| The Épendes Observatory (46°45′45″N 7°08′22″E) is located near the city of Fribourg, Switzerland. The images for this landscape were taken in August 2006. The landscape comes in three resolutions (1024 / 2048 / 4096). File size is about 2.4 MB.
Note: If you have problems with this landscape (landscape doesn't appear because of low memory on the graphic chip), use the corresponding old style landscape below or use a smaller resolution (see the README file in the package).
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Urania Observatory, Vienna, Austria
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Michael Prokosch
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CC BY-ND 3.0
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0.9.x
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| The Urania Observatory (48°12′41.88″N 16°23′1.53″E) is located right in the middle of the city of Vienna, capital of Austria. Built in 1910 under emporer Franz Joseph I. it's the countries oldest non-scientifical observatory still in use for people's education. This landscape was taken in August 2011. If you are not distracted by the stars, you can even see St. Stephan's cathedral, the Viennese Giant Wheel and the Danube Canal. File size is about 11.5 MB.
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Jungfraujoch High Altitude Research Station, Switzerland
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Christian Waldvogel
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N/A
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0.10.x
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| Lying at 3580m in the Bernese Alps, the Jungfraujoch is often dubbed "Top of Europe". It has been home to an astronomical observation station for more than 80 years. The spherical landscape was created from 20 images taken on June 29th, 2008, at 1015, from the lower terrace of the Sphinx Obervatory. The landscape comes in three resolutions (1024 / 2048 / 4096).
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St Peter's Square (Vatican)
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Gianfranco Mazzani
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N/A
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0.10.x
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| This is a complete high resolution panoramic view of the St Peter's Square, City of Vatican.
Gianfranco Mazzani photographed this panorama in july 2004 by using a Nikon Coolpix 8700, and stitched
the original 10 pictures together into a spherical panorama using Hugin program. The panorama has been
than cutted into 8 alfa channel pictures and re-dimensioned the width to 2048 pixel and then dimensioned
the height to 32 cm by using Photoschop elements 2.
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Frantoio Rodiano, Italy
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Christian Waldvogel
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N/A
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0.10.x
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| The Frantoio Rodiano (Rodiano oil press) is situated on the foot of Mount Gargano in Puglia / Italy. Just a few kilometers uphill lies Monte Sant'Angelo, the famous stop for christian pilgrims on their way to Jerusalem. Stargazing has been kin to this region for milleniae: the oldest graves found in the Frantoio's vicinity date back to pre-etruscan times, and the famous Castel del Monte, an astronomical observation in itself, is not far either. The spherical landscape was created from 8 images taken on September 20th, 2010, at 1707, from the uppermost terrace of the Frantoio Rodiano. The landscape comes in three resolutions (1024 / 2048 / 4096).
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Roque de los Muchachos, La Palma, Spain
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Uwe Buecher
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N/A
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0.10.x
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| This high resolution landscape was built with hugin from 20 photos taken in October 2007. It is located on top of the highest mountain on La Palma, Canary Islands. You can see the Buildings of the Observatorio del Roque de los Muchachos, one of them is the Gran Telescopio Canarias (GTC) which is the greatest telescope in the world today (10.4m diameter).
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English Garden, Munich, Germany
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Rob Spearman, Johan Meuris
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N/A
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0.9.x
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| This high resolution landscape was taken in April 2007 by Rob. Johan helped with the post production. The result is a very high quality landscape.
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English Garden, Munich, Germany
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Rob Spearman, Johan Meuris
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N/A
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0.9.x
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| The original English Garden landscape was re-constructed by Barry Gerdes as an old_style landscape. This means that it can be used with video hardware which cannot cope with single very large texture files, and yet preserves the resolution of the landscape (by splitting the images into multiple files). Try this is the original English Garden landscapes doesn't load on your computer.
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Calton Hill, Edinburgh, Scotland
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Friedrich Noelle, Barry Gerdes
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N/A
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0.9.x
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| Friedrich Noelle took a nice panorama of Observatory Hill, Edinburgh which Barry converted into a Stellarium landscape.
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Sighthill stone circle, Glasgow, Scotland
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Grahame Gardner
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N/A
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0.9.x
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| Sighthill stone circle is a modern stone ring constructed in 1979 by amateur astronomer and SF writer Duncan Lunan. Located next to the M8 motorway in Glasgow city centre, yet with surprisingly good views, the circle has alignments to the solsticial solar rises and settings and the lunar standstills. Alignments to the rising of Rigel are included for 1979 AD and 1800 BC. (2MB)
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Calanais I (Callanish) Avenue, Lewis, Western Isles, Scotland
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Grahame Gardner
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N/A
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0.9.x
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| Callanish is arguably the finest megalithic monument in the British Isles, and is just the largest site in a vast complex of interconnected monuments designed to observe the southern major standstills of the moon. From this position at the end of the avenue, the moon is seen to set behind the rocky outcrop of Cnoc-an-Tursa, only to 're-gleam' in the centre of the main circle a short time afterwards. (4MB)
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Machrie Moor 5, Isle of Arran, Scotland
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Grahame Gardner
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N/A
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0.9.x
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| This delightful little double-concentric stone circle is the first site you come to when visiting the Machrie Moor complex of megalithic sites on Arran. Although not the most spectactular site in the group, it is one of the most complete and has good views. (7.3MB)
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Mitchell's Fold stone circle, Shropshire, England
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Ian Pegler
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N/A
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0.9.x
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| This wonderful ancient stone circle stands on a plateau amid the rolling Shropshire hills and is loved by walkers, dowsers and Wiccans alike. April 2010 - new version uploaded, featuring improved centre camera position based on Alexander Thom's geometry and improved alignments. (1.8MB)
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Ponta da Piedade, Algarve, Lagos, Portugal
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Johan
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N/A
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0.9.x
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| Johan photographed this panorama in June 2006 and stitched it together into a spherical panorama that can be used with Stellarium. You see sandstone cliffs on the Atlantic coast of southern Portugal, a lighthouse, and a natural bridge.
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Gurnigel, Switzerland
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Martin Mutti
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N/A
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0.9.x
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| This is the site of the Bern Astronomical Society's observing site.
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Tishinka, Russia
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Dmitri Ardashev
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N/A
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0.9.x
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| This is a small village between Moscow's and Kaluga's regions, in 130 km south-west of Moscow (55°18'32.46N, 36°26'42.06E, alt=195).
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T60 dome, Pic du Midi Observatory, France
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Sylvain Rondi
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N/A
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0.9.x
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| Sylvain photographed this panorama in February 2007 and stitched it together into a spherical panorama that can be used with Stellarium. This is the panoramic view from the amateur 60cm telescope dome from T60 Association, installed at Pic du Midi Observatory.
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T1M terrasse, Pic du Midi Observatory, France
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Sylvain Rondi
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N/A
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0.9.x
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| Sylvain photographed this panorama in February 2007 and stitched it together into a spherical panorama that can be used with Stellarium. This is the panoramic view from the terrasse of the professional 106cm telescope at Pic du Midi Observatory (France).
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Ares, Galicia, Spain
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Rubén Castiñeiras Lorenzo
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N/A
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0.9.x
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| Ares is a small fishing village in Galicia, in the NW of Spain, close to the city of Ferrol. The 360 degree image was taken at the noon of August 6th, 2007, just in front of the "Paseo Rosalía de Castro". It has been made with 17 photos, stitched with Hugin 0.7 beta 4 and retouched with the Gimp 2.2.17.
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Ovindoli, Italy
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Pierluigi Panunzi
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N/A
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0.9.x
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| Ovindoli is a famous ski resort in central Italy.
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Stintino, Italy
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aid85
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N/A
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0.9.x
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| High resolution 360° landscape taken at "LaPelosa" beach in Stintino (SS) Sardinia \ Italy - Europe \ Mediterranean Sea.
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Bahia de Cádiz, Spain
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José Codejón
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N/A
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0.10.x
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| A new bridge is being built across de bay. The 360° panorama image was taken at noon of September 10th, 2012, from the pier of the small marina just closed to the Cadiz head of the bridge.
The final picture is the result of stitching 11 frames, taken out of a 63 seconds full HD video, using PhotoStitch and Gimp 2.6.8.
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Cocentaina, Spain
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Angel Juan Martínez
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N/A
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0.9.x
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| This is a panoramic view from the roof of the Secondary School of Cocentaina, a little town of the Pais Valencià (Spain), in the mountains that are between Valencia and Alicante, where I teach Astronomy with the help of Stellarium.
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Vonarskarð, Passage of Hope, Iceland
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Sveinn í Felli
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N/A
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0.9.x
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| This is the geographical center of Iceland, a barren pass between glaciers. Being sheltered from southern vinds by the huge Vatnajökull glacier, a great cold mass which then eliminates most humididy from the air, makes the place unusually good for stargazing. Old-style landscape, resolution is a bit low. (File is 1.1 Mb)
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Woodhenge near Stonehenge
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Hugo Jenks
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N/A
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0.9.x
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| Woodhenge near Stonehenge was constructed around 2200 BC. It comprised numerous wooden posts set into the chalky ground. These posts of course decayed, and their positions today are marked with concrete cylinders.
The posts are arranged, in plan view, as a series of concentric egg shapes. The axis of the egg shapes aligns approximately with summer solstice sunrise.
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Stonehenge
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Hugo Jenks
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N/A
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0.9.x
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| Was it an observatory? Yes indeed it was! The alignment of the monument with the summer solstice sunrise has been well known for many years. The alignment with the winter solstice sunset may have been more significant. For the first time, many additional alignments are published, and are detailed here: www.brontovox.co.uk These alignments demonstrate that Stonehenge was primarily a functional scientific instrument, used for measuring angles. The angles of interest were the rising and setting bearings of the sun, moon, and stars. It was therefore possible to map the entire visible sky.
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Central Munich
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Markus Dähne
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N/A
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0.9.x
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| This landscape shows the view from the Eastern observatory of the Deutsches Museum in Munich, Germany. During public observing sessions, Stellarium is used to help explain the sky :-)
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Leist, Switzerland
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Bernd Lang
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N/A
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0.9.x
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| This landscape was developed from a panoramic picture of the Leist in Switzerland (2222m). The picture was taken during a hiking tour from Tanenboden to the top of the Leist.
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Stonehenge, England
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Fernando
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N/A
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0.9.x
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| This landscape depicts Stonehenge - the famous prehistoric monument in Wiltshire, Southern England.
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Pico do Areeiro
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Filipe Gomes
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N/A
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0.9.x
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| This is a panoramic view of the Pico do Areeiro, the second highest point of the island. Madeira Island - Portugal.
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Cuevas del Negro, Andalucia
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Peter Lynch
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N/A
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0.9.x
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| A nearly flat rural landscape in southern Spain. The site has very dark skies and a view down to about 3° to the south.
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Las Cañadas del Teide, Tenerife, Spain
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José Ángel Estévez
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N/A
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0.9.x
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| This landscape of Las Cañadas was built in April 2008. It's located in the center of Tenerife island, Canary Islands. It can be viewed the Teide volcano -the highest mountain in Spain: 3.718 mts.-, El Llano de Ucanca and Los Roques de García with the characteristic rock "El Cinchado" which, with Teide Volcano, appeared in the old 1.000 ptas. bill.
Note: If you have problems with the landscape (landscape may not appear because low memory on VGA chip), try to download and replace the PNG landscape with this 50% scaled image.
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Frantoio Rodiano, Italy
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Christian Waldvogel
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N/A
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0.9.x
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| The Frantoio Rodiano (Rodiano oil press) is situated on the foot of Mount Gargano in Puglia / Italy. Just a few kilometers uphill lies Monte Sant'Angelo, the famous stop for christian pilgrims on their way to Jerusalem. Stargazing has been kin to this region for milleniae: the oldest graves found in the Frantoio's vicinity date back to pre-etruscan times, and the famous Castel del Monte, an astronomical observation in itself, is not far either. The spherical landscape was created from 8 images taken on September 20th, 2010, at 1707, from the uppermost terrace of the Frantoio Rodiano. The landscape comes in three resolutions (1024 / 2048 / 4096).
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Top of Water Tower of Lueneburg, Germany
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Uwe Prolingheuer
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N/A
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0.9.x
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| This is a panoramic view from the top of old Water Tower 56m above ground, constructed 1906/07, in Lueneburg, a town with many retained medieval houses. Northern Germany.
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GAS GAO, Russia
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Andrey Kuznetsov
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N/A
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0.10.x
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| Russia, Caucasus. The astronomical science station on the mountain Shadjatmaz. This is the view from amateur's observatory (by Andrey Kuznetsov, Sergey Kiselev).
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North America
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Salt Lake City Panorama
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Hiram Bertoch
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N/A
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0.9.x
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| Hiram made this panorama for the KidsKnowIt Network's outreach program.
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San Jose, California, USA
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BrendaEM
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N/A
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0.9.x
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| This panorama was made using Nasa's WorldWind. Screenshots were taken at 45 degree increments. The screenshots were layered and stitched together, and then offset until the the Northern mountains were aligned. A landscape such as this could be made of any location in the world. There is a plug-in for WorldWind called "BigScreenshot," that may make the process easier, but not automate it. A plug-in could be written to do this entire process automatically.
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Chesterton Elementary School - San Diego, California, USA
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John Chester
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N/A
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0.10.x
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| This landscape was taken to help encourage students to learn about science and astronomy using Stellarium. The panorama was taken at the playground area of Chesterton Elementary School on October 23, 2011. The image was constructed using the Multiple Image Method using 8 overlapping images to provide a high level of detail. The original composite panorama image was 22442 (width) x 2418 (height) pixels . Composite photo reduced to 5 equally sized photos of 2048 by 1024 pixels. Many trees created complex horizon background but left details, such as tether-ball poles, in place during transparency development to keep landscape realistic. The lines of the playground provide an interesting perspective with Stellarium.
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South America
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ESO's Very Large Telescope in the Atacama Desert, Chile
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Dirk Essl
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N/A
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0.9.x
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| The Very Large Telescope Project (VLT) is a system of four separate optical telescopes (the Antu telescope, the Kueyen telescope, the Melipal telescope, and the Yepun telescope) organized in an array formation. Each telescope has an 8.2 m aperture. The array is complemented by three movable Auxiliary Telescopes (ATs) of 1.8 m aperture. The project is organized by the ESO.
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Laguna Verde, Bolivia
|
Xavier Bonnefoy-Cudraz
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N/A
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0.9.x
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| This is a panoramic view of the Laguna Verde and Laguna Blanca under the Juriques (5704m) and Licancabur (5920m) Volcanos. These lakes are located in Reserva Nacional Eduardo Avaroa, Bolivia.
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Swiss Euler Telescope, ESO La Silla Observatory, Chile
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Malte Tewes
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N/A
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0.9.x
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| Euler is the nearby telescope that can be seen in the west. It is operated by the University of Geneva, and its main duty is the quest of extrasolar planets. The New Technology Telescope (NTT) shows up just behind Euler's control room, Tarot is in due south, and finally the venerable ESO 3.6 meter telescope sits on its hill in the southeast. The panorama was taken on September 3, 2010, at about 7:25 local time, a wonderful sunrise after a snowy night. Screenshots
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Polar regions
Special
Contributions
Please feel free to contribute your own custom landscapes here. Make thumbnails 200x114 pixels to fit with the rest of the page. Please include a location section in your landscape.ini file with the longitude, latitude, altitude and planet for the location of the landscape (see one of the pre-existing landscapes for an example).
To find out more about how to create a landscape, see the Stellarium User Guide, and examine existing landscapes. If you are having problems, posting to the forums is a good way to get some advice.
Important note on image dimensions
IMPORTANT: Make sure all textures have dimensions which are integer powers of 2, i.e. 256, 512, 1024, 2048, 4096, 8192, 16384, ... e.g. 4096 by 1024, 2048 by 2048 and so on.
This is a limitation of OpenGL. Some video hardware will work OK with images with different image dimensions, but many will not display properly, suffer vastly reduced frame rates, and even crash the computer.
Please make sure all contributed landscapes conform to these requirements, or your link may be removed.
Be aware that many people's video hardware cannot handle very large textures. This is hardware and driver dependent. A typical maximum image size is 2048x2048 or 4096x4096.
Package contents
Please package your landscape in a .zip file with all files inside a directory in the .zip file. This should be unique to your landscape, and it would be nice it it was all lower-case with no spaces.
You should also include a readme.txt file which describes the landscape and specifies any usage restrictions or licensing terms for the images used in the landscape.
Licensing
Before you distribute images as part of a Stellarium landscape, please ensure you are legally entitled to - you must be the copyright holder for the images, or be able to distribute them for use with Stellarium under the terms of some agreement with the copyright holder (e.g. Creative Commons licensed images found on the web).
It is important to explicitly state what use may be made of images for your landscape. This should be done in the readme.txt file inside the .zip file.
We recommend an open source license compatible with Stellarium itself (i.e. the GNU GPL), or one of the Creative Commons licenses.
Example package contents
From the Mars Husband Hill landscape:
Archive: landscape_mars_husband_hill.zip
Length Date Time Name
-------- ---- ---- ----
1815308 02-05-07 21:02 mars_husband_hill/husband_hill.png
211 05-28-07 19:44 mars_husband_hill/landscape.ini
1096 06-04-07 15:21 mars_husband_hill/readme.txt
-------- -------
1816615 3 files
The readme.txt file should look something like this:
Mars Husband Hill Landscape for Stellarium
==========================================
Description
-----------
This landscape was taken from the NASA Spirit Rover on Mars.
Files
-----
This file (readme.txt) should have come in a zip file with some others
Here is a listing of all the files which should be in the zip file:
mars/readme.txt
mars/landscape.ini
mars/husband_hill.png
Installation & Use
------------------
Unzip the landscape package file in your personal stellarium data
directory, or the <config_root>/landscapes directory. The location
varyies depending on your operating system. See the Stellarium
User Guide for per-platform details.
Once you have installed the landscape, open Stellarium and go to the
configuration dialog. Select the landscapes tab, and select the landscape
from the list of available landscapes.
Credits
-------
Image credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech/Cornell
http://marsrovers.jpl.nasa.gov/gallery/panoramas/opportunity/index.html
License
-------
NASA Images are released into the public domain
File encoding
The landscape.ini and readme.txt files should be UTF-8 encoded text or plain ASCII. It's probably a good idea to adopt the Windows line ending encoding, (i.e. CR LF). Both Windows and *nix style line ending encoding should work OK in Stellarium, but Windows users will have an ugly time reading the readme.txt if it uses *nix-style newlines.
Need hosting?
If you have a landscape you would like to share but have no web-space to put it, email to any Stellarium developers and we'll put it on our site.
See also
Tools
The following tools may be useful to people who wish to create their own landscapes:
| Program |
Platform(s) |
License |
Notes
|
| Autostitch
|
Windows; may also run on Linux using Wine
|
Shareware/demo
|
Looks like it produces good results. Registered version includes extra types of projection. No source code.
|
| Hugin
|
Linux; FreeBSD; MacOSX; Windows
|
Free/open source (GNU GPL)
|
Hugin is a nice GUI for Panorama Tools
|
| Panorama Tools
|
Linux; FreeBSD; MacOSX; Windows
|
Free/open source (GNU GPL)
|
|
| Microsoft's Image Composite Editor
|
Windows
|
Free (costless)
|
|
External links