- published: 29 Dec 2013
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The Planets, Op. 32, is a seven-movement orchestral suite by the English composer Gustav Holst, written between 1914 and 1916. Each movement of the suite is named after a planet of the Solar System and its corresponding astrological character as defined by Holst.
From its premiere to the present day, the suite has been enduringly popular, influential, widely performed and frequently recorded. The work was not heard in a complete public performance, however, until some years after it was completed. Although there were four performances between September 1918 and October 1920, they were all either private (the first performance, in London) or incomplete (two others in London and one in Birmingham). The premiere was at the Queen's Hall on 29 September 1918, conducted by Holst's friend Adrian Boult before an invited audience of about 250 people. The first complete public performance was finally given in London by Albert Coates conducting the London Symphony Orchestra on 15 November 1920.
Space Odyssey: Voyage to the Planets (released as Voyage to the Planets and Beyond in the United States) is a fictional documentary about a manned voyage through the solar system. Space Odyssey premiered in 2004 and was made by the BBC. It was written and directed by Joe Ahearne and produced by Christopher Riley, who was presented with the 2005 Sir Arthur Clarke Award for Best TV & Radio Presentation.
The story is set at an unspecified time in the future, though in the accompanying book, the mission's chief science officer recalls reading Arthur C. Clarke's 2010 (published 1982) some 40 years earlier.
Five astronauts pilot the nuclear thermal rocket powered Pegasus spacecraft on a tour of the solar system. Their mission is a collaboration of the NASA, CSA, ESA and РКА space agencies and takes the crew to Venus, Mars, a close flyby of the Sun, Jupiter’s moon Io and Europa, Saturn, Pluto, and the fictional Comet Yano-Moore. Most of the planetary destinations the crew reaches are followed by a manned landing there. Prior to the mission large tanks of hydrogen were deposited in stable orbits around the planets to allow the crew to refuel to have sufficient delta-v for the multi-year mission.
The Space Odyssey series is a series of science fiction novels by the writer Arthur C. Clarke. Two of the novels have been made into feature films, released in 1968 and 1984 respectively. Two of Clarke's early short stories may also be considered part of the series.
Short stories:
Novels/Films:
The 2001 screenplay was written by Clarke and Stanley Kubrick jointly, based on the seed idea in "The Sentinel" that an alien civilization has left an object on the Moon to alert them to mankind's attainment of space travel. In addition, the 1953 short story "Encounter in the Dawn" contains elements of the first section of the film, in which the ancestors of humans are apparently given an evolutionary "nudge" by extraterrestrials. The opening part of another Clarke story, "Transience", has plot elements set in about the same time in human history, but is otherwise unrelated.
Voyage(s) or The Voyage may refer to:
A planet (from Ancient Greek ἀστήρ πλανήτης astēr planētēs, or πλάνης ἀστήρ plánēs astēr, meaning "wandering star") is an astronomical object orbiting a star or stellar remnant that
The term planet is ancient, with ties to history, science, mythology, and religion. Several planets in the Solar System can be seen with the naked eye. These were regarded by many early cultures as divine, or as emissaries of deities. As scientific knowledge advanced, human perception of the planets changed, incorporating a number of disparate objects. In 2006, the International Astronomical Union (IAU) officially adopted a resolution defining planets within the Solar System. This definition is controversial because it excludes many objects of planetary mass based on where or what they orbit. Although eight of the planetary bodies discovered before 1950 remain "planets" under the modern definition, some celestial bodies, such as Ceres, Pallas, Juno and Vesta (each an object in the solar asteroid belt), and Pluto (the first trans-Neptunian object discovered), that were once considered planets by the scientific community, are no longer viewed as such.
BBC Documentary Voyage To The Planets Part 1
BBC Documentary Voyage To The Planets Part 2
Intro to "Voyage to the Planets"
Voyage to the Planets: The Sun
Voyage to the Planets - MARS Documentary
Voyage to the planets: Jupiters moon Io
Voyage to the Planets: Jupiter 1
Voyage to the planets: Venus 2
Voyage to the Planets: Saturn and Venus
Voyage to the Planets: Europa
This is the introduction to the BBC documentary "Voyage to the Planets" (titled "Space Odyssey" in Britain). Coming from the same people producing the "Walking With..." series of educational specials, it's a very real-seeming documentary which treats the mission as though it were actually happening. The astronauts visit the majority of the planets of the Solar System using plausible near-term future space hardware. I highly recommend the DVD.
Clip from BBC documentary 'Space Odyssey: Voyage to the Planets' from 2004 where the crew use the Sun's gravity to accelerate Pegasus to 300 km/sec towards Jupiter.
Voyage to the Planets offers essential travel advice for any aspiring astronaut planning to take the first steps on the Red Planet. When that boot print is made, this small impression will be more than a giant stride into space: it will be proof that humans are once again moving beyond our comfort zone to explore new worlds and opportunities.
Clip from BBC documentary from 2004, 'Space Odyssey: Voyage to the planets' of an imaginary landing on Jupiters moon Io.
Clip 1 from BBC documentary 'Space Odyssey: Voyage to the planets' regarding Jupiter (the abrupt ending is due to the fact that this was the end of episode one when broadcasted on British TV).
Clip 2 from BBC documentary 'Space Odyssey: Voyage to the planets' of an imaginary landing on Venus.
From BBC TV series "Space Odyssey: Voyage To The Planets" Venus is the second planet from the Sun, orbiting it every 224.7 Earth days.The CO2-rich atmosphere, along with thick clouds of sulfur dioxide, generates the strongest greenhouse effect in the Solar System, creating surface temperatures of over 460 °C (860 °F).Venus has an extremely dense atmosphere , the atmospheric mass is 93 times that of Earth's atmosphere while the pressure at the planet's surface is about a pressure equivalent to that at a depth of nearly 1 kilometer under Earth's oceans. Saturns Rings are the biggest in the Solar System, the crew from Voyage to the planets wan´t to fly by Cassini column...a very difficult task, because there are very many small asteroids, which could damage the spaceship. Enjoy :)
A short clip from BBC documentary 'Space Odyssey: Voyage to the planets' regarding Europa.
It's time to tour the planets that make up our solar system, come on
The closest to the sun is the planet Mercury
Next the shrouded planet Venus
Is as covered as can be
The Earth is next, we call it home
Let's hope it stays that way
And then there's Mars, it's really red
What more can I say?
The gassy planet Jupiter's
As big as planets come
Then there's Saturn with its mighty rings
Made up of tiny crumbs
We travel on to Neptune
That's a gassy-freezy ball
And cold and tiny Pluto
It's the furthest one of all
Well, there you go, that's our solar system