NASAImages- View an archive of over 4000 NASA images with full description on your phone. Set translation to Russian/French/Italian/Spanish/German/Japanese/Chinese languages in menu (uses Google translate). Provides front-end for NASA’s Astronomy Picture of the Day Website. Set phone wallpaper to image you see
PlanetariaX Explore the night sky using your Android-powered phone! Draws a representation of the sky for the current time right where you are! Search for planets, constellations and stars
Ever wondered what satellites are flying above your head when you look up? This app will show them to you using augmented reality. Point your phone's camera to the sky, and small icons track the locations of various satellites
It is a simple widget that displays the moon phase and age of the moon. Full moon and new moon, first quarter, last quarter will be announced in the widget. The calendar opens the widget when touching
SkEye is an advanced planetarium that can also be used as a PUSHTO guide for telescopes.
• Ensure that you calibrate the magnetic sensors by waving the phone in a figure-8 motion of your hands. (Required on some phones and optional on others).
• If using with a telescope, read:
Tutorial: lavadip.com/media/SkEyeIntro.pdf
Ideas: lavadip
SkyORB for Android - SkyORB is a feature-rich app for astronomy enthusiasts. It includes a comprehensive database of celestial bodies, 3D star map and planetarium, ephemeris, sun clock, moon phases, notifications for important phenomena, weather forecasts, and more
Solar Planets 3D - Planets of the solar system can be viewed in three dimensions.
(Mercury,Venus,Earth,Mars,Jupiter,Saturn,Uranus,Neptune)
- Function
1) 3-D can reduce or enlarge the planet.
2) The auto-rotate feature and the user can rotate the 3-D planets.
3) Wiki conjunction with information about the solar system's planets are visible
Solar System Explorer Lite - will take you on an interactive 3D trip through our solar system. Featuring more than 35 planets, moons, asteroids and space probes that have visited them, you will have a chance to see a different side of our little piece of the galaxy!
Surface images of the planets have been re-constructed from photos taken by telescopes or NASA spacecraft