Cosmonium is an open source 3D astronomy and space exploration software
Star gazing can be a relaxing experience, and you don't need telescopes or planetariums to learn more about the mysteries of Space. You can explore galaxies that are far, far away, right from the comfort of your house.
No, I'm not talking about movies and TV Shows. Welcome to Cosmonium, an open source 3D astronomy and space exploration software. It is based on the (now defunct) Celestia project.
Cosmonium is a chunky download at a little over 280MB and takes up about 527MB of space to install. You will need a graphics card that supports OpenGL 2.1+. If your computer can handle it, and if you the storage space to spare, you can try the HD and UHD textures. The textures weigh about 1.8GB each to download. I used the default textures that came with the program.
The program's installation is pretty straight-forward. When you run it, Cosmonium presents a view of the Earth. It displays the parameters of the selected celestial object such as the name, altitude, radius, in the top left corner, while the frame rate is displayed on the opposite edge of the window.
Left-click on a planet or star to select it, double-click centers the view to the selected object. Pan the camera by holding the mouse button and dragging it in the direction you want. Use the mouse wheel to zoom in and out.
Let's get back to Earth, shall we? Right-click on the planet and drag to rotate the view.
Cosmonium uses the current time to display the day/night view of the earth, i.e. the side of the earth that is away from the sun will appear dark. And yes, you can rotate it in a 360° view and this also works with the galactic view.
Speaking of time, click on the Time menu to increase, decrease, reverse, freeze the time, or set the time manually or use the current time.
Can we view other planets and stars? Of course, hit Enter and search for the object, e.g. Mars. Hit Enter again and its stats appears in the top left corner, tap the G key to jump to the planet. This includes a nice travelling animation which pans and zooms onto the object.
Right-click on an object to view a menu that includes among other options, an info panel.
There are many keyboard shortcuts available in Cosmonium, you can access the list by using Shift + F1. E.g. Ctrl + M toggles the menu bar, V hides the HUD. Most of the options are also available in the various menus. The Render menu lets you toggle labels, orbits, bodies, grids, guides, 3D rendering and more. Switch to full screen mode using Alt + Enter or from the Window menu. The program has an option to save screenshots, but it doesn't seem to work.
Cosmonium is an open source application, it is written in Python. The program is available for Linux, macOS and Windows. You can change the graphics settings from the File menu > Preferences > Advanced screen. To learn more about the advanced options, refer to the project's wiki. The application is still in beta. It crashed a few times in full screen mode. Hopefully it will get better with updates.
About 40 years ago, astronomer Carl Edward Sagan advocated “COSMOS”, which made me interested in the stars shining at night.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carl_Sagan
My interest in the magnificent “universe” is never-ending, and I feel the romance from celestial globes and “planetariums”.
Information:
Stellarium (software) | Stellarium is an open-source free-software planetarium
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stellarium_(software)
Alternatives to Cosmonium for all platforms:
https://alternativeto.net/software/cosmonium/
If Ashwin said Celestia is defunct, then it must be true, as he is never wrong, well except for this:
“..and if you the storage..”
And all those other mistakes..
Hmm. Never mind.
I recommend Sky Map app for Android, is made by Google. Love to look at some point in the sky and know exactly what I’m seeing.
Celestia isn’t defunct; they just came out with a new version the day before yesterday: https://celestia.space/news.html
I’m glad someone pointed that out, I did a double take reading the article. I really used to like this site but it seems lately that the quality of reporting here is abysmal; so much incorrect information being written here.
A crazy round ball spinning 1000 miles/hour around axis plus another 67k miles/hour around another fire ball
or
bull crap, it’s flat
@n.sa_spin_ball
Nice try, but you’re still a dopey robot, programed to spew blather.
Nice try, but you’re still a dopey mind washed sheep programed to obey.
There was a program like this I used to use nearly a decade ago, looked very similar, I think it was called Celestia. I wonder if this is based on it. I always had a lot of fun “exploring” the solar system with it.
“It is based on the (now defunct) Celestia project.”
But as I mentioned in another reply to this article, Celestia isn’t defunct; they just came out with a new version the day before yesterday: https://celestia.space/news.html
Guide 9 released by Project Pluto runs well under linux (with wine) as well as windows or dos.
It is inexpensive and well supported with many features, used around the world.
Does it show pictures of aliens?
Yes, it does!!
I should also recommend you add this to SkyChart / Cartes du Ciel
Deep Sky Software that integrates with SkyChart / Cartes du Ciel.
http://www.mikehotka.com/DAS/index.htm
SkyChart / Cartes du Ciel
https://www.ap-i.net/skychart//en/start
“Star gazing can be a relaxing experience, and you don’t need telescopes or planetariums to learn more about the mysteries of Space.”
I beg to differ. We live in one of the few areas where we have at least three “dark-sky” locations. Looking directing at the stars, say from the beaches in the Yasawas or from “Island in the Sky” is looking at the stars and planets. Otherwise, it’s like looking at a magazine for pleasure.
Or course, no software can replace the real deal of seeing it with one’s own eyes. But it presents an alternative and a decent one this software seems.
Wow great find. Thank you Ashwin.