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Russell C. Davis Planetarium

39201 Jackson, MS, United States of America (USA) (Mississippi)

Address 201 E. Pascagoula Street
 
 
Floor area unfortunately not known yet  
 
Museum typ
Planetarium


Opening times
RENOVATING! Currently, the regular show schedule is suspended.

Admission
Status from 05/2024
Temporary closed

Contact
Tel.:+1- 601-960-15 52  eMail:mikew jacksonms.gov  

Homepage www.jacksonms.gov/russell-c-davis-planetarium/

Our page for Russell C. Davis Planetarium in Jackson, United States of America (USA), is not yet administrated by a Radiomuseum.org member. Please write to us about your experience with this museum, for corrections of our data or sending photos by using the Contact Form to the Museum Finder.

Location / Directions
N32.297668° W90.186619°N32°17.86008' W90°11.19714'N32°17'51.6048" W90°11'11.8284"

Jackson, officially the City of Jackson, is the capital city and largest urban center of the U.S. state of Mississippi.

Amtrak, the national passenger rail system, provides service to Jackson. The Amtrak station is located at 300 West Capitol Street. The southbound City of New Orleans provides service from Jackson to New Orleans and some points between; it leaves at 11:20 a.m. and arrives in New Orleans about 3:30 p.m. The northbound City of New Orleans provides service from Jackson to Memphis, Carbondale, Champaign-Urbana, Chicago, and some points between.

Located next to the Jackson Convention Complex in downtown Jackson. It is the only building that sits on top of a street.

Description

jacksonms.gov:
Come experience the universe in one of the South's largest and best equipped planetariums! Our giant hemispheric theater, named after Dr. Ronald E. McNair, has been newly outfitted with a state-of-the-art 4k fulldome digital projection system, and it's going to blow you away.  The totally immersive fulldome digital cinema experience is like no other, giving you a front row seat for the action in ways that no flat screen ever could.

From entertaining feature shows to enriching educational content, our new digital Minolta Super MediaGlobe II system is ready and waiting to take you to the depths of the oceans to swim with the fish, into the past to roam with dinosaurs, into the heavens to fly right up to the planets and stars, and everywhere in between!

The Russell C. Davis Planetarium was built primarily for presenting educational and entertaining shows regarding astronomy or for training in celestial navigation. A dominant feature of the planetarium is the large dome-shaped projection screen where scenes of stars, planets and other celestial objects appear and simulate the “motions of the heavens'. In the past, our systems could display the sky at any point in time: past, present or future and show the night sky as it would appear from any location on Earth.  But now, as the city of Jackson moves into the digital age, we are capable not only of simulating earthly stargazing, but of escaping the bonds of our planet's gravity and flying all the way to the edge of the known universe, with all the cosmic sight-seeing you could imagine on the way.


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