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TheSkyX Student Edition includes many useful tools for the beginning or student astronomer. The table below lists most of the significant features.
Click on the photo to view the high-resolution version.
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Sample Screen |
Explanation |
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Looking up at dusk.
Looking North.
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Large databases of pictures and photos.
Photo Viewer tab on the Command Center
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TheSkyX Student Edition is packed with thousands of celestial objects of exciting photographs.
View and find the planets, dwarf planets, the Moon, comets, asteroids, satellites, and thousands of the most popular non-stellar objects from the Messier, NGC and IC catalogs and approximately 1 million stars from the Hipparcos-Tycho star catalog (complete to about 12th magnitude).
Database of Objects and Photos
Also included:
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Show What's Up Tonight
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What's Up? Report
Hertzsprung-Russell diagram
Wide-field chart showing the location of Saturn tonight.
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Specify the viewing time, your optical aid (naked eye, binocular, or small telescope) and which objects you're interested in seeing; TheSkyX's What Up? command automatically generates an observing list for you, complete with detailed descriptions about many deep-space objects, photographs, and Hertzsprung-Russell (HR) diagrams for stars.
You can scroll through the report, and watch the star chart update to show you exactly where to look for the object. |
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Predict and Watch Iridium Flares |
Iridium Flare Report
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Predict and watch simulated Iridium Flares directly from TheSkyX Student Edition. Watch the tutorial. |
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Watch Animated Tours |
Analemma Tour
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TheSkyX Student Edition comes with animated tours that you can watch and learn basic concepts about astronomy.
Tours include:
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The Tours, Find, Chart Elements, Labels and Date and Time windows stacked together.
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The Command Center window contains tabs to access the most frequently used options. By default, this window is placed to the left of the Star Chart, but can be moved to the right side, or appear as a moveable "floating" window.
The Command Center contains the following tabs:
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Simple Find A list of common names that match the letters you type appears automatically.
Advanced Find Every object is "searchable" from a tree list. |
TheSkyX Student Edition has a friendly but powerful Find command so you can easily locate any object from TheSkyX's astronomical databases.
All objects in the databases are listed in a "tree list" and sorted by type (star, double star, galaxy, cluster, etc.). Just double-click on the name to find it. or specific classification, including:
The object's name appear in green letter if it's currently above the horizon, or in black italicized letters when it's below the horizon.
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Object Information reports are configurable to show as much, or as little information as you need. |
Click on any object, or use the Find command to show extensive information on celestial objects, including:
Sample Object Information
The table below lists the typical information displayed for different classifications of objects.
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Software Bisque Observatory
New Mexico Skies
Mountain horizon.
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Choose from several supplied custom panoramic horizons, including:
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Chart Elements tab.
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Turning on and off the many different object classifications or "chart elements" is easy with the Chart Elements tab on the Command Center. |
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Reference Lines and Reference Photos
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Show the following reference lines and reference photos:
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Object Name Labels
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TheSkyX Student Edition can show the name and labels for the following objects:
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Sample star field
Star Options dialog
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Adjust the appearance of the stars by:
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Orientation Toolbar
Toolbars positioned around the Star Chart
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Chart Status window with configurable report |
The Command Center contains a Chart Status window that shows a continuously updated information about the current chart.
Choose from the following list of status report options:
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Chart with optional scroll bars turned on
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Show/hide horizontal and vertical scroll bars for easy chart navigation. |
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Look North, South, East, West or Up
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You'll never be lost in space!
Automatically adjust the star chart for your location to look North, South, East, West or straight up (at the Zenith).
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Zoom Box
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Click and drag the "zoom box" on the chart to magnify (or zoom in) to this region.
The size (or field width) and the angular separation between the corners of the zoom box is shown. |
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Custom Field of View dialog
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Built-in command to show the following fields of view:
Or, define any number of custom fields of view using the Custom Fields of View dialog. |
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Navigate to any coordinate using the Screen Center tab on the Navigate dialog.
Navigate the Celestial Sphere
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Use the Navigate dialog to:
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Command Center's Date & Time tab.
Custom Time Flow Increments and Rates dialog.
Date & Time toolbar. |
Input any date from 4,712 B.C. to A.D. 10,000 and any time to show a beautiful star chart for your location.
The Date & Time tab on the Command Center Window provides many different tools that allow you to quickly set any date from 4,712 B.C. to A.D. 10,000 and any time, including:
The Date & Time tab allows you to specify specific times, including:
The Date & Time tab allows you to control the rate that time changes, or the increment of time to advance or retreat in time. The default increments include:
You can define custom increments and rates using the Custom Time Flow Increments and Rates dialog.
The Date & Time toolbar allows you to set the Date & Time as well as specify the direction and rate of time.
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Earth Map tab on the Location dialog.
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By default, your location on earth is detected automatically from the web.
Or,
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Mercury evening visibility in 2008.
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Create a "path" that represents the future or past positions of the Sun, planets (including Pluto), Moon, comets and asteroids.
The screen to the left shows the position of Mercury each evening for one year. |
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Find and View Solar and Lunar Eclipses with the Eclipse Viewer |
Solar Eclipse Viewer.
Example lunar eclipse view.
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When is the next solar eclipse? Where it visible on Earth? You'll be able to answer these questions, learn about the dynamics of solar and lunar eclipses and more using the Solar and Lunar Eclipse Viewer.
Solar Eclipses
TheSkyX Student Edition shows every solar eclipse for the next twenty years (or so) from the current date (starting from any date).
Select an eclipse from the list and the three-dimensional view of the Earth gives the local circumstances:
The line of the central eclipse, and the rise/set curve, shadow limits, and eclipse shadow for the Earth's umbra and penumbra can be shown.
You can adjust the viewing distance from Earth using the Solar Viewing Distance Slider.
Lunar Eclipses
As with solar eclipses, the next twenty years of lunar eclipses are listed. Select one from the list to view it's local circumstances, including:
When a lunar eclipse is selected, the Sky Chart is updated to show the Earth's penumbra and umbra and the position of the moon at the start of the eclipse.
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Conjunction Finder dialog.
View of actual conjunction.
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Select any 2 or 3 planets (or the Sun and Moon) to find the future conjunctions of these bodies.
For each conjunction that is located, the Star Chart shows a green laser pointer to help you find it in the actual sky.
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Major Jovian moons.
Saturn's major moons.
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View the positions of Jupiter's and Saturn's moons. |
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Display or Print Calendars showing the Moon's Phase and other information
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Monthly calendar.
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Show a calendar of any month with the phases of the moon, as well as sunrise, sunset, moonrise, moonset, and Iridium Flare occurrences.
A full year's calendar can be shown, too.
The calendar can be saved (or exported) as a PDF file.
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View High-Resolution Images of the Moon using the Moon Viewer |
Moon Photo Viewer
Location of Moon Viewer Photo on Sky Chart's Moon |
The interactive Moon Photo Viewer is a powerful tool that can:
Identify and get feature specific information by placing the mouse over the photo. The Moon Photo Viewer can overlay text labels of any or all of the following lunar features, including:
When the "Highlight Photo's Location on Chart" option is checked, you'll see a blue region on the Sky Chart Moon's surface. This area represents the location of the current high-resolution Moon image. This lets you easily relate the position of a particular photograph its position on the Moon's surface.
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View the Solar System in Three Dimensions using the 3D Solar System Viewer |
Three dimensional system simulator.
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Use this command to toggle between looking at the sky from Earth or from outer space (anywhere inside our solar system). When this command is enabled, the starry background is turned off by default and only the objects in our solar system are displayed. The default location is an arbitrary point in space. It’s above the plane of the ecliptic, just inside Pluto’s orbit, looking back at our Sun. |
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View Stars in Three Dimensions with the 3D Stars Tool
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3D view of the stars.
"Side view" of the stars in the constellation Orion.
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View the stars in three dimensions with the 3D Stars tool. You can zoom, pan and scroll around the universe to learn about the relative positions of the familiar (and not so familiar) stars in the Milky Way.
Even isolate any of the 88 constellations and view only the stars within its boundaries.
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Bevis Constellation Drawings
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Show detailed drawings for all or selected constellations. |
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Sunset at the Mt. Wilson Institute Observatory.
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The Daytime Sky Mode lets you simulate and how the sky looks during daytime, as well as dawn and dusk. |
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Full screen view.
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Have the Sky Chart occupy the entire desktop in Full Screen mode. |
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Preserve Dark Adaptation with the Night Vision Mode
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Show the entire screen (and the entire desktop) predominantly red to preserve the eyes' dark adaptation (or night vision). |
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Show Mirror Image
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Mirror image reverses the Sky Chart, left-to-right. This lets you view the sky as you would through a telescope with an erect, but laterally reversed image. |
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Chart mode reformats the display to look more like what you would see in a book of star charts, or how a printed chart is going look. |
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Create Publication-Quality Star Charts. Graphics and PDF Output |
Exported chart (JPG)
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Sky Charts can be exported in portable network graphs (PNG) format, or saved in portable document format (PDF) for publication of charts and graphics to your astronomy club newsletter or web site.*
*Please include the text "Copyright Software Bisque, Inc. www.bisque.com" when publishing star charts generate by TheSkyX. |
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Print high-resolution star charts on your printer for field use. |
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Right-click (or CONTROL+CLICK) to Drag the Chart
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Press the right mouse button, or press CONTROL+CLICK on one mouse button mice to drag the chart. |
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Screen rotation tab.
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Use the Rotate tab on the Orientation > Navigate dialog to rotate the Sky Chart to any angle. |
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Database Manager to Add/Remove Core and Additional Sky Databases (SDBs)
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Database Manager dialog.
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Use the Database Manager to:
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Chart showing proper motion arrows
Configure Stellar Proper Motion
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TheSkyX User's Guide teaches you many fundamental principles about astronomy and relates them to TheSkyX Student Edition software.
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Display 235 degrees to 30 arcsecond fields of view
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Wide field showing the Milky Way
Zoomed in on Jupiter and Io
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Reveal the wonders of the Celestial Sphere, at any magnification from 235 degrees to 30 arcseconds. |
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Limit the Magnitude and Size of Displayed Objects
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Filter objects by magnitude (upper and lower) and angular size (upper and lower)
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Select any object type (or all object types) and easily adjust the upper and lower magnitudes and the maximum and minimum angular sizes of objects that are shown on the Sky Chart. |
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Comets
Asteroids
Satellites
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