Digital Universe Atlas

AMNH's atlas of the cosmos covers the solar neighborhood out to the edge of the observable universe.

The Digital Universe incorporates data from dozens of organizations worldwide to create the most complete and accurate 3-D atlas of the Universe. Since 1998, the American Museum of Natural History and the Hayden Planetarium have engaged in this mapping effort to explore the universe interactively in our immersive spaces or from a laptop.

This cosmic cartography offers a new perspective on our place in the universe, and contextualizes the scales of the universe in real time, redefining our sense of home.

OpenSpace

We currently distribute the Digital Universe through the open-source software called OpenSpace. Co-founded by AMNH and Sweden's University of Linköping, OpenSpace brings the latest techniques from data visualization research to the general public. OpenSpace supports interactive presentation of dynamic data from observations, simulations, and space mission planning and operations. It requires a fairly powerful computer with a dedicated graphics card, but it is free to use.

Learn more about OpenSpace with the OpenSpace User Guide.

Milky Way with several data sets shown in Digital Universe
Digital Universe's Milky Way Galaxy with assorted data sets shown, including star clusters, nebulae, and stellar remnants.
Brian Abbott/AMNH/OpenSpace

Distribution

The Digital Universe is now distributed to planetariums, science centers, and museums around the world. It appears in pre-rendered content like our Space Shows, video series like Skylight, or in the 360 videos we're producing. OpenSpace also drives our real-time planetarium programs, Astronomy Live, that mainly appear in the evening public programs.

Nearby galaxy clusters to the Milky Way
Nearby galaxy clusters, in orange, to the Milky Way Galaxy, marked as "Home" at bottom-center. Each point is a galaxy akin to the size and scale of the Milky Way with hundreds of billions of stars.
Brian Abbott/AMNH/OpenSpace

Help

The OpenSpace User Guide contains chapters that discuss how to use the software, profiles and how to build tours around them, and the data sets included in OpenSpace. There are also tutorials and other guidance out there on OpenSpace and Digital Universe.