StarLab

StarLab Our STARLAB® page is to keep you up to date with the latest in astronomy and STARLAB® planet Explore everywhere. Learn anywhere with StarLab®.

StarLab®, a division of Emersive Learning, brings the planetarium to you. Using Starry Night software with our Digital StarLab®, you can totally immerse your students in astronomy or use The Layered Earth software to dig into the center of Earth Science. The StarLab® you know and love today came into existence in July of 2008 as Science First of Yulee FL purchased Learning Technologies and the Sta

rLab® product line. Along with portable-inflatable planetaria,
StarLab® is the first truly portable planetarium, invented back in 1977 by Philip Sadler and his class of middle school students in Lincoln, Massachusetts. Today, StarLab® is the most widely used planetarium in the world. It continues to provide a universe of opportunity to many people who previously did not have access. It is the product of the efforts of many different people: students, educators, family members, and friends. Many have seen the promise of portable planetaria, and these teachers, museum educators, university professors, and school administrators have helped to guide and influence the development of StarLab®, its supporting materials and the unique ways it has come to be used in schools and museums around the world. We welcome you to contact us with any questions regarding our company or products. We are happy to help with any areas including technical support, funding assistance, and customer service inquiries!

05/08/2025

Psst... We're Moving!

This page is going into deep space 🌌 But don't worry — the real magic is happening over at our shiny new page:
👉 facebook.com/OfficialStarlab

Come along for:
🚸 Tips for your classroom
📷 Fresh photos of our learning dome in action
💬 Thought-starters for educators
🎓 Real stories from real schools

Same Starlab — just with more fuel and fresher vibes. Go give us a follow — we’ll make it worth your scroll! 💫

The official Starlab page. Part of the Science Interactive Group

05/05/2025

Attention Starlab enthusiasts!

🚀 We’re blasting off to a new digital galaxy!
Like an old, scratched telescope, we’re retiring this page — still legendary, but ready to pass the torch to something brighter.

👉 Follow us at https://www.facebook.com/OfficialStarlab/ for:
✨ Out-of-this-world product pics
🧠 Brilliant STEM tips
💡 Inspiring case studies & stories from schools like yours
📚 Resources to spark minds

Let’s keep exploring the universe together — hit that LIKE button and join us on the new Starlab mission!

The official Starlab page. Part of the Science Interactive Group

    for this week, with worldwide content from our astronomer Chris Vaughan. Clear skies! (image by Cassini JPL)
05/04/2025

for this week, with worldwide content from our astronomer Chris Vaughan. Clear skies! (image by Cassini JPL)

This image of Saturn’s small moon Mimas was captured by the Cassini spacecraft during its closest pass in 2010. the large crater Herschel and its central mountain peak evokes the Death Star.

    for this week, with worldwide content, from Digital starlab user Chris Vaughan. Clear skies! (image by Ron Brecher)
04/27/2025

for this week, with worldwide content, from Digital starlab user Chris Vaughan. Clear skies! (image by Ron Brecher)

This spectacular image by “Astrodoc” Ron Brecher of Guelph shows the bright spiral galaxy Messier 81 aka Bode’s Nebula at left and the smaller outburst galaxy Messier 82 aka the Cigar Galaxy at the right. They are near the Great Bear’s nose in Ursa Major. The pair will share the view of even...

    for this week, with worldwide content, from our Digital Starlab trainer Chris Vaughan. Clear skies! (image by Wikipe...
04/13/2025

for this week, with worldwide content, from our Digital Starlab trainer Chris Vaughan. Clear skies! (image by Wikipedia)

A sampling of galaxy forms. Clockwise from upper left: Messier 87 “Virgo A” (elliptical), Messier 102 “Spindle” (lenticular), NGC 1365 (barred spiral), NGC 4656 “the Crowbar” (irregular), and Messier 81 “Bode’s Nebula” (spiral). All except NGC 1365 are visible on spring evenings fr...

    for this week, with worldwide content, from our astronomer and geophysicist Chris Vaughan. Clear skies! (image by Da...
03/30/2025

for this week, with worldwide content, from our astronomer and geophysicist Chris Vaughan. Clear skies! (image by David Chapman)

My friend Dave Chapman from Dartmouth, Nova Scotia captured this terrific image of Saturday morning’s partial solar eclipse shortly after sunrise from Seaforth, NS.

    for this week, with worldwide content, from Digital starlab user chris Vaughan. Clear skies! (image by Kerry-Ann Lec...
03/23/2025

for this week, with worldwide content, from Digital starlab user chris Vaughan. Clear skies! (image by Kerry-Ann Lecky Hepburn)

Meteorologist, pilot, and astro-imager Kerry-Ann Lecky Hepburn captured this amazing shot of the August, 2017 partial solar eclipse behind Toronto’s CN Tower from Saint Catharine’s, Ontario. See more of her work at www.weatherandsky.com

    for this week, with worldwide content, from Digital Starlab user Chris Vaughan. Clear skies! (image by John Deans)
03/16/2025

for this week, with worldwide content, from Digital Starlab user Chris Vaughan. Clear skies! (image by John Deans)

This magical image of the sword of Orion was captured and processed by my friend John Deans when he was in Bancroft, Ontario on February of 2021. All three patches of light from top to bottom are visible to unaided eyes below Orion’s three-starred belt. Binoculars and backyard telescopes will reve...

    for this week, with worldwide content, from our Digital Starlab astronomer Chris Vaughan. Clear skies! (image by Mic...
03/09/2025

for this week, with worldwide content, from our Digital Starlab astronomer Chris Vaughan. Clear skies! (image by Michael Watson)

This composite of images of the total lunar eclipse of April 15, 2014 was captured and processed by Michael Watson. The curved shadow on the moon told the ancients, and us today, that the Earth is a sphere.

    for this week, with worldwide content, from our in-house astronomer Chris Vaughan. Clear skies! (image by LRO)
03/03/2025

for this week, with worldwide content, from our in-house astronomer Chris Vaughan. Clear skies! (image by LRO)

This image of the Lunar Straight Wall or Rupes Recta in Mare Nubium was captured by the Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter. While the feature can be seen through binoculars, a backyard telescope will reveal more detail. (Adapted from NASA LRO)

Address

86475 Gene Lasserre Boulevard
Yulee, FL
32097

Opening Hours

Monday 8am - 5pm
Tuesday 8am - 5pm
Wednesday 8am - 5pm
Thursday 8am - 5pm
Friday 8am - 5pm

Telephone

1-800-875-3214

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