Stellarium Interphase pictured above. Toggle On/Off features include: Constellations, Constellation Art, Atmosphere, Landscape, Azimuthal Grid, Equatorial Grid, Deep Sky Objects, and Night Mode.
Ever been to a planetarium? No? Neither have I! Not many people can easily travel to a planetarium, with there being less than 350 in the entire United States. Planetariums aren’t accessible, and so many children grow up not knowing what the stars look like due to dense pollution and smog. Due to large upkeep costs and lack of interest, more have been closing with each coming year. Having online field trips, such as the Stellarium Planetarium, allows the love for space and astral research to continue to grow within the youth. Their interactive website allows students to see what the night sky currently looks like from where they’re located, being able to toggle on constellation and grid features. Depending on the user, it can be altered to fit their ideals and needs to give them a proper space-viewing experience. The map can highlight planets that could be mistaken for stars, showing the vast world there is above our heads, just ever so slightly out of reach for the average American. Stellarium gives a new life, showing people the stars when they believe they never reach them.
You may access the Stellarium website through this link here: https://stellarium-web.org/
Now this is beautiful! Reminds me of the app they have, not this brand but still so similar! Would be amazing if It recorded the sky live so you can save whenever you want too!