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Home Planet is a free program by John Walker
in Switzerland. The following content has been taken from his site at http://www.fourmilab.to/homeplanet/hp3.html
. Home Planet is in the public domain; it is free software. It is not
shareware--you don't have to register it or pay anybody, and the version you
download is fully functional as soon as you install it. You are free to give
copies to your friends, post it on other systems, and otherwise use and
distribute it in any way without permission, restriction, attribution, or
compensation of any kind.
Download Home Planet (7 MB)
After
you download it, you will need to unzip it and install it. To
see where Greg's ashes are orbiting at any time, select the satellite called
Celestis 03. Overview as written by the program's
author:
I like to think of Home Planet as putting a somewhat different spin on the
Earth and sky. It allows you to view:
 | An earth
map, showing day and night regions, location of the Moon and current
phase, and position of a selected earth satellite. Earth maps can be customized
and extended by editing a DLL which provides maps to Home Planet.
 | A panel showing detailed position
and phase data for the Sun and Moon.
 | Panel showing positions
of planets and a selected asteroid or comet, both geocentric and from
the observer's location.
 | A sky
map, based on either the Yale Bright Star Catalogue or the 256,000 star
SAO catalogue, including rendering of spectral types, planets, earth
satellites, asteroids and comets. Celestial coordinates are included, and an
extensive and user-extensible deep-sky database includes all Messier objects
and many of the NGC objects. Precession and proper motion are accounted for
in the display.
 | Databases of the orbital elements of 5632 asteroids and principal periodic
comets are included, allowing selection of any for tracking. These databases
can be user-extended using standard orbital elements. MS-DOS utility
programs are included which convert asteroid and comet orbital elements in
the form published in Minor
Planet Electronic Circulars (MPECs) to the CSV format used by Home
Planet. Subscribers to the MPECs can thus easily add newly reported
asteroids and comets to the database. Source code for these programs is
included.
 | A telescope
window which can be aimed by clicking in the sky map or telescope
itself, by entering coordinates, or by selecting an object in the Object
Catalogue (see below). Limiting magnitude, labeling, coordinate display,
etc. can be defined by user. Right click on an object to display its entry
in the Object Catalogue. Stellar magnitudes can be plotted for stars in a
given magnitude range in the telescope window. This makes it easy to create
comparison star charts for variable star observing.
 | A horizon
window which shows the view toward the horizon at any given azimuth. The
horizon can be adorned, if you wish, with fractal forged terrain and
randomly generated scenery, including houses, livestock, and trees. The
scenery is generated by a user-extensible DLL which allows customization.
 | Object
Catalogue allows archiving images, sounds, and tabular data about
celestial objects. Both new objects and new categories can be added.
Bidirectionally linked to the Telescope window.
 | Chart catalogues, selectable from within the Object Catalogue, can be
plotted in all sky view windows (Sky, Telescope, and Horizon). Objects are
specified by right ascension and declination, and can use any of the star,
deep-sky, satellite, or user-extensible scenery icons, plus text (in various
colours) with user-defined justification. Commands allow plotting straight
lines and lines which curve along parallels of latitude. Chart catalogues
are included which display chart boundaries and numbers of Sky Atlas 2000.0,
and radio sources from the Third Cambridge Survey (3C) cross-identified with
the 4C survey.
 | Orrery
allows viewing the solar system, including a selected asteroid or comet,
from any vantage point in space, in a variety of projections.
 | Satellite
tracking panel. Select an Earth satellite from a database of two-line
elements, and see its current position and altitude. Satellite will be shown
as an icon
on Earth map, Sky, Telescope, and Horizon windows.
 | View
Earth From panel allows you to view a texture-mapped image of the Earth
as seen from the Sun, Moon, a selected Earth satellite, above the observing
location, or the antisolar point. For a real thrill, fly Molniya through
perigee!
 | Satellite
database selection allows maintenance of multiple lists of satellites,
for example TV broadcast, ham radio, low orbit, etc.
 | DDE server permits export of real-time Sun, Earth, and Moon information to
any DDE client. A sample Excel worksheet is included.
 | Computerized telescope pointing is supported via DDE. When the Telescope
window is pointed at a given location in the sky, its coordinates are
exported via DDE (in both Right Ascension and Declination and Altitude and
Azimuth), permitting a concurrently running telescope drive program to
direct a physical telescope to the given location. The sample Excel
spreadsheet displays the telescope pointing coordinates.
 | Catalogue look-up allows you to right click in any of the sky windows
(Sky, Telescope, or Horizon) and locate the closest object in the Object
Catalogue. With no keyboard modifier, this searches all eligible catalogues.
With SHIFT, CONTROL, or SHIFT+CONTROL, you can direct the search to a
specific catalogue. Catalogues are provided which give the chart/plate
number for the given location in the following atlases: SHIFT Sky Atlas 2000.0
CONTROL Uranometria 2000.0
SHIFT+CONTROL Palomar Observatory Sky Survey
 | Observing
site selection lets you choose a site from a database of more than 1300
cities and towns, or by clicking on the world map.
 | Animation lets you put the heavens into higher gear, with selectable
speed, time direction, and time step. Demonstrate seasonal changes, Moon
phases, satellite orbits, precession, proper motion, etc.
 | Time and
date can be set to any moment from 4713 B.C. into the distant future.
Examples of historical research are included.
 | Planetary position calculations use the high-precision VSOP87 theory, and
lunar position is calculated with the revised ELP-2000/82 lunar theory.
Calculation of dynamical time, obliquity of the ecliptic, nutation,
precession, and aberration all use high precision algorithms.
 | Cuckoo
clock. Hey, I live in Switzerland! You can turn it off.
 | A comprehensive WinHelp file is included, describing not only the program
but the astronomical concepts that underlie it and how to learn more about
astronomy.
 | Complete program development log included in WinHelp format, accessible
from main Help file.
 | An optional screen saver that shows the
illuminated Earth and position and phase of the Moon is included. |
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Home Planet was built entirely from source code using Microsoft Visual C++
version 5.0 bought directly from Microsoft.

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