The Peter Harrison Planetarium at greenwich

The planetatarim at greenwich was so good we went straight back in, after a quick snack stop, and experienced another show.

Without any special 3D glasses it felt as if the planets were coming straight for you, descending from above. We even physically recoiled in our seats in case we were crushed.

greenwich market gif small

Before the show we browsed the market an ate some tasty treats.

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The Peter Harrison Planetarium is a 120-seat digital laser planetarium, situated in Greenwich ParkLondon and is part of the National Maritime Museum. It opened on May 25, 2007.[1]

The planetarium uses Digistar 3 software with blue, red and green lasers and grating light valve (GLV) technology to create a 4,000 pixel strip. This strip is swept to produce a 5,000 by 4,000 pixel image, refreshed 60 times per second. The image is projected through a fisheye lens onto the dome of the planetarium.[2]

The planetarium is housed inside a 45-ton bronze-clad truncated cone, tilted at 51.5o to the horizontal (the latitude of Greenwich), and stands parallel to (but 50 metres east of) the prime meridian.[3] It was conceived under the then Director, Roy Clare CBE, as the centrepiece of the “Time and Space” project, a £17.7m re-development of the Royal Observatory, Greenwich, and funded with a £3.25m grant from the Peter Harrison Foundation.

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