VR 360 Star Trek 2009 Enterprise Fly Over for Virtual Reality

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VR 360 Star Trek 2009 Enterprise Fly Over for Virtual Reality Please don't forget to subscribe  https://www.youtube.com/c/VR360TV/?sub_confirmation=1 This is a 360 space video that allows you to experience flying over  and around the new Starship USS Enterprise as featured in JJ Abrams classic reboot of the Gene Roddenberry' 1960's tv show. In this space video you can swipe around and look in all directions at this classis space starship.   Thank you for watching - Please don't forget to subscribe https://www.youtube.com/c/VR360TV/?sub_confirmation=1 360 videos can be viewed on any device, if you are using a PC, use a browser that supports 360 videos such as Google Chrome or Firefox.  If you are watching on a mobile device such as a phone or tablet, make sure you download the YouTube app, you can then swipe around with your finger to see the full 360 degrees of the video. You can also move your phone around to see the 360 as well.  Please join us on  Facebook https://ww

VR 360 Space travel through the centre of our galaxy to a globular star cluster and beyond for VR

 VR 360 Space travel through the centre of our galaxy to a globular star cluster and beyond for VR

Welcome to another VR 360 TV space video, in this deep relaxation episode, you are about to travel through the centre of our galaxy to a globular star cluster and beyond out of our galaxy, accompanied by an amazing sound track composed be Steve Connell.

Globular clusters orbit galaxies in orbits which are highly eccentric and highly inclined to the galactic plane. Orbiting in the “outskirts” of a galaxy, they take perhaps a few hundred million years to complete a single orbit. In a telescope, a globular cluster looks like a fuzzy ball, with individual stars at the periphery merging into a solid ball of light towards the center. However, this is simply because the stars are so close together that they can’t be resolved individually telescopically. At the center of a globular cluster, stars may reach a density of between 100 and 1,000 stars per cubic parsec. That’s in contrast to the density of stars near our sun, estimated at about 0.14 star per cubic parsec. If you were standing on a planet orbiting a star in a globular cluster, your night sky would be extremely crowded with nearby stars!
  
360 videos can be viewed on any device, if you are using a PC, use a browser that supports 360 videos such as Google Chrome or Firefox. 
If you are watching on a mobile device such as a phone or tablet, make sure you download the YouTube app, you can then swipe around with your finger to see the full 360 degrees of the video. You can also move your phone around to see the 360 as well. 

However the best way to view 360 is in a VR headset such as an Oculus Quest or HTC Vive, although these headsets are amazing but can be a bit expensive. The best way to experiment with VR is to buy a headset to put your phone in, such as a low cost google cardboard on amazon.

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