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Discover 'Saturn: Jewel of the Solar System' at The New Detroit Science Center's Dassault Systemes Planetarium

    Out-of-This-World Show Presented by the Metro Detroit Saturn Retailers

    DETROIT, June 22 /PRNewswire/ -- Ever since Galileo discovered the rings
of Saturn in 1610, people have marveled at this dramatic and mysterious
planet.  Now you can discover Saturn's beauty and mystery in the Dassault
Systemes Planetarium show, "Saturn: Jewel of the Solar System," presented by
the Metro Detroit Saturn Retailers, at The New Detroit Science Center.
    "Saturn: Jewel of the Solar System," opening June 26, 2004, follows the
mission of the Cassini-Huygens spacecraft as it orbits the second largest
planet of the solar system, studying its more than 30 moons, bright rings and
other features.
    The Cassini-Huygens spacecraft was named for Dutch astronomer Christian
Huygens and French-Italian astronomer Jean Dominique Cassini, both
instrumental in discovering important details in Saturn's rings.  The
spacecraft represents the combined effort of scientists and engineers in 18
countries, and is one of the largest (size of a school bus), heaviest (12,000
pounds) and most sophisticated (array of 18 packages of scientific
instruments) interplanetary spacecrafts ever launched.
    Launched on October 15, 1997, Cassini-Huygens set out on a seven year, two
billion-mile odyssey to the outer solar system.  Though not the first
spacecraft to reach Saturn, Pioneer II and Voyagers I and II made brief
visits, speeding past the planet between 1979 and 1981, Cassini-Huygens will
be the first to stay and analyze the planet, its moons and rings.
    The Cassini spacecraft will monitor and send back information on Saturn's
rings and the innermost regions of the planet's magnetic field.  The mission
of the Huygens probe, product of the European Space Agency, is to detach from
the Cassini spacecraft, descend into the atmosphere of Saturn's largest
satellite, Titan, and actually land on its surface.
    Larger than the planets Mercury and Pluto, Titan is one of the most
intriguing satellites in the solar system, with a thick, smoggy shroud of an
atmosphere rich in organic compounds that may hold secrets to the evolution of
life on our planet.  The probe will record the chemical composition of Titan's
atmosphere, as well as make detailed measurements of temperature, pressure and
density while on-board cameras capture up to 1,100 photos and sophisticated
radar map portions of Titan's surface.
    Cassini will also study Saturn's magnificent rings, nearly 200,000 miles
from edge to edge, yet no more than a hundred feet thick.  In reality they are
an enormous blizzard of millions upon millions of pieces of ice that range in
size from grains of sand to boulders larger than a house.  Each races around
Saturn in separate orbits at speeds up to 50,000 miles per hour.
    While the "tour phase" of the mission is scheduled to last four years, the
spacecraft may well remain in good health long thereafter.  If so the mission
may be extended to have a closer look at new discoveries encountered along the
way, or take a higher risk assignment beyond the scope of the regular mission.
    The New Detroit Science Center's Dassault Systemes Planetarium is one of
the world's finest digital planetarium projection systems.  Digistar(R)
technology and Sky-Skan automation allow spectacular journeys through the
wild, wide universe.  Images are projected in three dimensions onto a 50-foot
wide, three-story high dome, which fills the audience's field of vision.  A
13,000-watt Dolby Digital 5.1 Surround Sound system allows viewers to
experience a phenomenon like a Supernova in its full sound and fury.
    The New Detroit Science Center features 110,000 square feet of scientific
exploration, including Michigan's only IMAX(R) Dome Theatre; the Dassault
Systemes Planetarium; the Ford Learning Resource Center; the DTE Energy Sparks
Theater; the DaimlerChrysler Science Stage; an 8,700 square-foot Science Hall
for traveling exhibits; five exhibit laboratories -- General Motors Motion
Laboratory, Dow Foundation Life Sciences Laboratory, Waves & Vibrations
Laboratory, Matter & Energy Laboratory and SBC Children's Gallery; and a
Special Events Lobby.  It has served more than one million visitors in its
first 30 months.  For more information on The New Detroit Science Center
please call 313-577-8400 or visit the website,
http://www.detroitsciencecenter.org


SOURCE The New Detroit Science Center




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  • http://www.detroitsciencecenter.org
    CONTACT:
    Kelly Fulford, Director of PR & Marketing,
    +1-313-577-8400, ext. 430, kfulford@sciencedetroit.org , or
    Matthew Birman, PR & Community Outreach Coordinator,
    +1-313-577-8400, ext. 446, mbirman@sciencedetroit.org , both of
    The New Detroit Science Center