View Full Version : [Neishapur] New Planetarium for Khayyam Cultural and Scientific Society *Aflak Namaa*


panj-delaavaraan
May 4th, 2006, 07:23 AM
In the name and spirit of the great astronomer Omar Khayyam, a new Planned planetarium in Neishabour is being built.

http://www.mssimmons.com/ms/iran/iran2002/Neishabour/Astronomony.com7.html

Omar Khayyam is perhaps the best known Persian poet in the west. An important mathematician and astronomer, Khayyam lived in the 11th and 12th centuries and is revered in Iran as something of a renaissance man. One of a long line of Persian and other Islamic scientists, Khayyam’s greatest accomplishments were as a mathematician, particularly his development of a new calendar. Before Khayyam, the solar calendar used for official purposes started over at year one with each change in government. The Islamic lunar calendar -- out of sync with both the official solar calendar and the seasons -- was often used by the populace. Khayyam developed the precise Persian solar calendar that is still used in Iran today. But it is a poet that he is celebrated; his collection of poetic works, Rubayyat, is one of the treasures of Persian literature.

Now, 900 years later, Khayyam’s home town of Neishabour is a city of 500,000 located 70 miles west of Mashad, the capital of Iran’s largest province, Khorassan. Located in Iran’s extreme northeast abutting Afghanistan and Turkmenistan, the terrain and people of Korassan give it a distinctly central Asian appearance. With its proximity to the terminus of the Silk Road traveled by Marco Polo and succeeding caravans from Europe to China, Nesihabour was the first city in what is now Iran to suffer the Mongol invasions of the 13th century. As exotic as the other regions of Iran may seem to a westerner, Khorassan Province seems even more so to me with its Afghani influence and stark, rolling mountains.
An Afghani street musician in the eastern Iranian city of Neishabour.

This rural town is home to a campus of nationwide, government-operated Azad University. Three thousand students from the surrounding area study management and agriculture, with more courses of study planned for the near future, including astronomy. The astronomy connection comes primarily from Neishabour’s association with Omar Khayyam. The venerated poet’s tomb now has a gorgeous open structure standing over it, a modern tower of blue and white sporting inscriptions of the poet’s verse. We attended the annual celebration of Khayyam at his tomb in a park near other important monuments to the past. The festivities were attended by prominent citizens of Neishabour and officials of the provincial government, along with over 1000 others crowded into the surrounding parkland. The internally lit monument gave an almost surreal atmosphere to the history, music and recited verse from Rubayyat that were all a part of the ceremony.
The tomb of Persian poet, mathematician and astronomer Omar Khayyam.

As in other towns with astronomy enthusiasts anticipating our arrival, our small group of westerner astronomers did not escape celebrity status. We were among a small group of notables given one flower each and ushered to the venerated poet’s tomb for a more intimate ceremony (if such a thing is possible with television news cameras rolling), a recitation by a famous poet and the placing of the flowers on the tomb. It was a bit awkward being before the crowd and cameras without knowing just what was expected but it was clearly an honor nonetheless. Soon after returning to our seats, within the Farsi narration I heard my name and those of the other western guests over the loudspeakers. With television cameras rolling I was suddenly ushered to the stage to speak -- with no instruction on what to speak about. Standing behind an Afghani traditional musical group waiting to perform, I gave a simple statement of appreciation for the welcome we had received in Neishabour and the honor of being a part of the ceremonies. It must have been the right thing to say -- as I walked the long aisle back to my seat audience members in every row leaned towards the aisle to thank me for my words. As elsewhere in our journey the Iranians were hospitable, welcoming and always appreciative of the slightest measure of goodwill.
Questions were posed to this panel of astronomers from the US and Germany as well as Iran.Photo by Gernot Meiser.
Astronomy in Neishabour is becoming far more important than just the association with a distant ancestor, however. In addition to an active amateur astronomy community, local teachers are getting their students involved in astronomy, a practice that seems to be a driving force behind the tremendous upsurge in interest in the science throughout Iran. Alireza Khomarian is one such teacher in Neishabour. Alireza holds star parties for his 10 to 14 year old students at which they draw star charts locating objects they’ve observed. At other times they collect articles for a scrapbook, produce a gallery of their projects, translate web sites into Farsi for other amateurs and track the motion of sunspots. Their participation in astronomy is active and public, much as we’ve found in other cities in Iran.


The planned Khayyam Cultural and Scientific Society’s planetarium.
But the biggest astronomical news in Neishabour is a construction project a short walk from Omar Khayyam’s tomb. The Khayyam Cultural and Scientific Society (http://www.khayam-css.org) is building a planetarium and science center that will be among the largest in the Middle East. Stadium seating for 280 people faces a large screen on one side of the theater for a variety of presentations within the 76-foot dome. The five million dollar project will be paid primarily by large contributors and investors, with only the Zeiss Universarium projector provided by the government. A variety of departments will be operated by diverse organizations and universities. Support for the project is broad, with many volunteers -- all the way up to the director of the construction project -- giving their time and skills to ensure its completion. The design drawings show a complex of exquisite beauty matching the Khayyam monument nearby, and townspeople hope that it will attract visitors and investment in their developing rural town. As elsewhere in Iran, if enthusiasm was sufficient then success would be assured.
http://www.mssimmons.com/ms/iran/iran2002/Neishabour/Planetarium_thumb.jpg

http://www.mssimmons.com/ms/iran/iran2002/Neishabour/Planetarium.jpg

Makaveli
May 4th, 2006, 08:13 AM
wow, very nice. its about time we appreciate our astronomers and scientists that were the reason the enlightenment was triggered in Europe

Gilgamesh
May 4th, 2006, 08:26 AM
Very nice indeed...

shugs
May 4th, 2006, 01:35 PM
THATS AMAZING!!

Hope fully theyl get round to building the Ali Senna University the shah planned for Hamedan lol

shayan
May 4th, 2006, 02:32 PM
wow looks very Iranian!

persian
May 4th, 2006, 05:10 PM
Excellent

avicenna
May 4th, 2006, 11:33 PM
Wow, that is really great!!!

Parth
May 10th, 2006, 02:55 AM
Beautiful....it would be a great tribute to the Persian mathematician and astronomer.
I think Iran is the only country in ME / Islamic world which had made solid progress in science , mathematics , literature & philosophy in the past. All your neighbours are rather underperformers.

panj-delaavaraan
May 10th, 2006, 03:02 AM
Well thank you for your comment. Throughout Middle East history, Iran has pretty much been the only country that has made advances in these fields in the region.

gole_hayahou
May 19th, 2006, 01:24 PM
a belated happy khayyam day! :D

Gilgamesh
September 27th, 2006, 09:24 AM
http://www.mssimmons.com/ms/iran/iran2002/Neishabour/Planetarium.jpg

from wiki

a render with different details

http://img138.imageshack.us/img138/5986/aflaaknamaa0tb1.jpg

This portrait has been used to introduce Aflaak Namaa plan. Aflaak Namaa is under construction but most of it has been completed.

Gilgamesh
April 25th, 2007, 12:02 AM
:happy:

http://img110.imageshack.us/img110/561/aflak20namaac1.jpg

shugs
April 25th, 2007, 12:06 AM
Wow kool.. nice find!

Can't really tell which render theyre going for tho! I hope it's the second one

persian
May 5th, 2007, 08:33 PM
Only the dome seems to be complete. and they have gone for the 2nd render it seems.

shugs
August 6th, 2008, 10:25 PM
From Flickr by Saeid Aghaei taken in June 08.

http://img159.imageshack.us/img159/839/2590846706b4ca16ecfaopj3.jpg

Older one from 2007 by Reza Moradi Sani of Flickr

http://img185.imageshack.us/img185/8692/25079770386c9339cea8oxi6.jpg

And in late 06 By mehrabani from Flickr...
http://img292.imageshack.us/img292/8085/263405686164790d58a2bzc4.jpg

Shapoor
June 13th, 2009, 11:38 AM
Update:

http://farm4.static.flickr.com/3396/3621727332_2a672b3c4c_b.jpg

arashmordad
June 13th, 2009, 06:55 PM
^^ it's gonna look amazing when finished :D

alitezar
June 13th, 2009, 07:34 PM
Yes, so beautiful :)