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These are located in Mumbai, New Delhi, Pune and Bangalore, plus there is a Jawahar Planetarium in Allahabad, where Jawaharlal Nehru was born. The Nehru Planetarium in New Delhi is situated on the grounds of Teen Murti Bhavan, previously known as 'Nehru Memorial Museum and Library', earlier the official residence of India's first Prime Minister ...
It is located in Worli, Mumbai. The centre is named after India's first Prime Minister, Jawaharlal Nehru. In 1977, the centre started with the 'Light and Sight' exhibition, and then in 1979 a Science Park was built. On 11 November 1985 it was opened to the public by Rajiv Gandhi, the then Prime Minister of India. [2] [3] Nehru Science Centre, Worli
Nehru Centre was conceived in 1972 in Bombay (now Mumbai), India by the late Shri Rajni Patel (an eminent criminal lawyer). [1] The foundation stone of this magnificent dream was laid by the late Indira Gandhi on 2 November 1972 on a six-acre plot leased by the Government of Maharashtra.
Modern High School For Girls Planetarium, [8] Kolkata; Nehru Planetarium, Mumbai; Nehru Planetarium, New Delhi [4] Planetarium, Muzaffarpur, Bihar [4] Priyadarshini Planetarium at the Kerala Science and Technology Museum, Thiruvananthapuram; Raman Science center Planetarium, Nagpur; Regional Science Centre and Planetarium, Kozhikode
Planetariums Several centres house modern planetarium facilities with digital projection systems: Raman Science Centre & Planetarium, Nagpur - Features a 12.5-meter dome; Regional Science Centre and Planetarium, Kozhikode - Offers bilingual shows; Jorhat Science Centre & Planetarium, Assam - Specialises in astronomy education
The Raman Science Centre and Raman Planetarium Complex at Nagpur is an interactive science centre affiliated with Mumbai's Nehru Science Centre. [1] The centre was developed to promote a scientific attitude, portray the growth of science and technology and their applications in industry and human welfare, and hold science exhibits.
The Nehru Planetarium in Mumbai, has Digistar-3 Planetarium equipment installed, replacing the earlier Carl Zeiss Universal Projector. The Adler Planetarium upgrades their StarRider to the new Evans & Sutherland Digistar 3 system; a mini-dome opens in their production department running both Digistar 3 SP and Producer systems. 2005
The Hanging Gardens, in Mumbai (still widely known as Bombay), also known as Pherozeshah Mehta Gardens, are terraced gardens perched at the top of Malabar Hill, on its western side, just opposite the Kamala Nehru Park. They provide sunset views over the Arabian Sea and feature numerous hedges carved into the shapes of animals.