Filtering by: SCIENCE

Eclipse 2024
Aug
19
to Apr 8

Eclipse 2024

  • Evansville Museum of Arts, History and Science (map)
  • Google Calendar ICS

Mark your calendars! On April 8th, 2024 Evansville will experience a total solar eclipse. Get excited for this once in a lifetime natural phenomenon with our Eclipse exhibition, open now in the science galleries.

View Event →
Numbers
Nov
8
to Apr 25

Numbers

  • Evansville Museum of Arts, History & Science (map)
  • Google Calendar ICS

Numbers

Do you hate math? Your attitude may change abruptly after visiting the highly interactive exhibition, which focuses on mathematics as it relates to everyday life. In this exhibition, visitors explore how the recreational environment of games and puzzles is based on numbers. Our newest science exhibition will take you closer to math than you’ve ever been before. Through experimentation and playing games you can test your knowledge about numbers, hone your estimation skills, try your luck at games of chance and even see how many seconds have elapsed since the exhibit opened. Numbers invites you to explore numbers and take a look at mathematics from a fresh point of view.

Mathematics Rock Presentation

In the videos below Dr. Jenna Kloosterman, Assistant Professor of Engineering at the University of Southern Indiana, discusses the importance of women in mathematics. These videos are from the program “Mathematics Rocks” presented at the Museum on November 12. For more contributions about women in science and math, don’t miss the exhibition, “Numbers”, now on display in our Center for History and Science.

View Event →
Virtual Exhibition - Light Beyond the Bulb
May
10
5:00 PM17:00

Virtual Exhibition - Light Beyond the Bulb

The glow of a candle. The warm rays of the rising sun. The illumination of a lamp. All bring comfort and warmth to our lives. But there is much more to light than meets the eye. It is more than simply the product of a light bulb. Light allows us to communicate, entertain, explore and understand our world. Light is more than the product of a light bulb. It is a key factor in the creation of a successful image. It takes on many forms, some of which are largely invisible without modern technology.

View Event →
One Small Step: The 50th Anniversary of Landing on the Moon
May
12
to Jul 28

One Small Step: The 50th Anniversary of Landing on the Moon

The challenge of spaceflight drew upon the best and the brightest of a generation, and was the longest, most public and dramatic drama of the Cold War between the United States and the Soviet Union. With unshakeable momentum, the race to take the first steps on the Moon served as a unifying counterpoint to the turbulent 1960s. With NASA’s successful Apollo 11 mission on July 20, 1969, successfully landed two men on the lunar surface and returned them safely to Earth. 

The Center of History and Science exhibition includes black-and-white and color photographs of the historic mission where men from Earth first set foot on the Moon. Also included will be a Lunar Theater where the guests can learn more about the manned moon missions of fifty years ago. Interpretive text, graphics and popular culture artifacts from the period will also be displayed. 

In the five decades since the manned missions our Moon has not been forgotten. The exhibition will display amazing, large-scale, high-resolution photographs of the lunar surface taken between 2009 and 2015 by the Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter. These images provide unique visual data to help answer our questions about the Moon's formation, its continuing geological evolution and its relationship to Earth.

Looking forward, the exhibition considers the future of the Moon, when we might return and the potential for a continual presence for humankind on our only natural satellite.

Accompanying the exhibition will be daily presentations in the Koch Immersive Theater of a special planetarium show that which explains further the supreme feat of landing astronauts on the Moon. An interactive planetarium show with the same name as the exhibition will use the unique capabilities of the Museum’s digital planetarium to details our satellites’ unique relationship with Earth, highlight a few of the manned and unmanned missions which proceeded the Moon landings and showcase archival footage of the Apollo missions. Admission to the planetarium show will be complimentary with every paid admission to the Museum.

View Event →