Fulldome Films

In Saturn's Rings film cover half of Saturn and its rings

In Saturn's Rings
38 minutes
Grade 8 and up

Fly through lavishly arranged visuals as we visit distant galaxies, tour the planets of the inner Solar System, Jupiter, its moons, and - of course - Saturn's rings. "In Saturn’s Rings is a groundbreaking giant-screen adventure that takes audiences on a journey of the mind, heart, and spirit, from the Big Bang to the awe-inspiring rings of Saturn." The film makes no use of CGI - all imagery is from animated high-resolution photography. Narrated by LeVar Burton.

Big Astronomy people, places, discoveries. Three different angles of a telescope observatory

Big Astronomy
27 minutes
Middle school and up

Take a journey through observatories used by professional astronomers in the gorgeous mountains of Chile, one of the best astronomical observing locations on Earth. Our planetarium is transformed into a giant observatory dome as astronomers investigate the Solar System and the distant observable Universe. Visit with the technicians from an array of STEM disciplines who build, maintain, and operate these huge instruments.

We are Guardians film cover with an ocean and sunset and globe above it with a cartoon satellite

We Are Guardians
25 minutes
Middle school and up

Our climate, our ecosystems, and the human-induced damage caused to both of them are explored in depth. Dive into a friendly introduction to the changes imposed upon our planet's climate, how we measure them, and what we can do about it. The film features approachable explanations, attractively animated visuals, and upbeat narration.

Atlas of a Changing Earth: Mapping our climate future with earth covered in building and space in the background with a satellite

Atlas of a Changing Earth
25 minutes
High school and up

With a combination of satellite imagery and computer models used by climate scientists, we explore the disturbed natural systems that regulate our warming planet. Visit a beautiful arctic island and witness the real changes human activity has inflicted upon its glaciers. The consequences of rising sea levels are vividly depicted with animations of our cities submerging.

Fly me to the moon with two cartoon blue astronauts

Fly Me to the Moon
49 minutes
Families, general audiences

An elaborate, animated film offering big adventure and comedy, set against the real story of our first visit to another world. Follow three young flies as they inadvertently stowaway aboard Apollo 11 and join Neil, Buzz, and Michael on their mission to pull off the very first moon landing!

From Earth to the Universe film cover with earth in the foreground and space behind

From Earth to the Universe
31 minutes
Middle school and up

The story of our understanding of the Universe begins with the days when we filled the skies with our legends. Take a tour of the Solar System, beginning with the Sun and moving outward with stops at each planet, several of the major moons, and comets. Then out even farther, as the story of the stars, nebulae, and the galaxies they fill are told.

Sunstruck
21 minutes
Middle school and up

Dive into our closest star, the Sun, and encounter its magnetic field, the engine driving dark sunspots and solar flares. Discover the shield that protects us from the Sun's storms and see real aurorae towering in the sky.

Aurora Strom film title with planetarium screen full of green aurora and trees

Aurora Storm
11 minutes
General audiences

Our planetarium is transformed into a clearing in the Alaskan wilderness. As the sky fills with flowing green light, the narration fills our ears with stories illustrating the cultural significance of aurorae to indigenous peoples of the far north. The interactions between the solar winds and the Earth's magnetic field are described as one of the nature's most beautiful phenomena unfolds.

Phantom of the Universe the hunt for dark matter has begun film title

Phantom of the Universe
27 minutes
High school and up

From the journey of protons racing through the world’s largest particle collider in Europe to up-close views of the Big Bang and emergent cosmos, Phantom of the Universe is a fulldome planetarium show designed to immerse audiences in the search for dark matter." Beautiful visualizations and concise narration shed light upon a major open question in our study of the Universe.

Chaos and Order Film Cover with orange and green patterns

Chaos and Order
40 minutes
General audiences

As the lights under the dome fade, complex and fantastic mathematical constructs fill the planetarium with wandering patterns of light and color. Fractals, simulations of colliding galaxies, and infinitely repeating patterns are paired with an ethereal soundtrack and no narration. Come relax with us.