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Find the best science events and make the most of your time in Launceston. From spirituality to gaming and more, we have the biggest event range and best discovery experience, there's something for everyone.
Experience the thrill of launch and challenges of life in space with NASA’s Artemis program. Narrated by Richard Armitage, take an immersive journey to space like never before. Each Planetarium show is followed by a live tour of the current night sky.
Join us in the Launceston Planetarium for our next screening of Ngā Tohunga Whakatere - The Navigators. Traverse the largest ocean on Earth with Moko, an intrepid teenager who follows the star paths of her ancestors. Each Planetarium show is followed by a live tour of the current night sky.
Blast off on an amazing ride with Tycho the dog and his young friends. Learn about night and day, space travel, phases of the Moon, and features of the lunar surface. Take a close-up look at the Sun, see Tycho play in zero gravity, witness Earth from space, and watch meteors shoot across the night sky. Each Planetarium show is followed by a live tour of the current night sky. * This show is friendly for young children.
Join QVMAG astronomers Chris and Johnny on a journey through the cosmos. Explore the science, stories, and surprises of our Universe, from tides on Earth to the large-scale structure of the Universe. Each Planetarium show is followed by a live tour of the current night sky.
Explore light pollution in the Launceston Planetarium's new show, Dark Side of Light. Discover the impact of artificial lighting on our health, environment, and economy. Each Planetarium show is followed by a live tour of the current night sky.
Join us in the Launceston Planetarium for our next screening of Origins of Life. Origins of Life deals with some of the most profound questions of life science: the origins of life and the human search for life beyond Earth. Each Planetarium show is followed by a live tour of the current night sky.
Join us in the Launceston Planetarium for our next screening of Capcom Go! As part of our program to celebrate the 50th anniversary of the first footsteps on the Moon. Each Planetarium show is followed by a live tour of the current night sky.
Join us in the Launceston Planetarium for our next screening of We Are Aliens. Earth is now a small world. The human race is connected better and faster than ever before, but what about elsewhere? Could we one day be part of a galactic community sharing our knowledge and ideas, or is Earth the only planet with life?
Join us in the Launceston Planetarium for our next screening of We Are Stars. The show takes a light-hearted look at the way stars burn, producing the range of elements with which we are so familiar. Each Planetarium show is followed by a live tour of the current night sky.
Join us in the Launceston Planetarium for our next screening of The Sun: Our Living Star. The Sun is the only star that we can study from relatively close range, and learning more about our Sun helps astronomers to understand more about other stars. Each Planetarium show is followed by a live tour of the current night sky.
Join us in the Launceston Planetarium for the next screening of From Earth To The Universe. Take a celestial discovery to understand humanity's place in the cosmos. This stunning, 30-minute voyage through space and time conveys, through sparkling sights and sounds, the Universe revealed to us by science.
Join us at the Launceston Planetarium for our next screening of Birth of Planet Earth. Birth of Planet Earth Our planet formed four and a half billion years ago, and scientists now think that our galaxy is filled with planetary systems, including planets roughly the size of our own. An important question is how the Moon formed. According to a major hypothesis, it came into being as a result of a catastrophic collision, which is depicted realistically on our planetarium dome. The show examines the questions of how Earth become a living planet in the wake of our Solar System’s violent birth, and what its history tells us about our chances of finding other worlds that are truly Earth-like. Each Planetarium show is followed by a live tour of the current night sky.