The inner workings of Gaia Sky are described in detail in the paper Gaia Sky: Navigating the Gaia Catalog.[2]
Gaia Sky offers many advanced features like the stereoscopic (3D), planetarium and panorama renderers. It also works with virtual reality headsets through SteamVR,[3] is fully scriptable with Python[4] and features game controller support that makes it possible to operate it even with a racing wheel.[5]
Gaia Sky is used by ESA to aid in the video production of Gaia Data Releases.[6][7][8] A video made with Gaia Sky was also featured in the Astronomy Picture of the Day website.[9]
The installer packages of Gaia Sky contain the program but no data at all. In order to use Gaia Sky, at least a download of the base data package, containing the Solar System with low-resolution textures, is necessary. Gaia Sky offers a built-in download manager which connects to the servers at the Astronomisches Rechen-Institut in Heidelberg to fetch the desired datasets. The downloading and deploying processes are seamless to the user.
Several datasets are available, offering higher resolution textures, different cuts of the Gaia eDR3 catalog (up to 1.46 billion stars), other star catalogs such as the Hipparcos catalog, different galaxy maps (dust, HII regions, etc.), nebulae or extragalactic catalogs such as NBG[10] or Sloan Digital Sky Survey.
All datasets are specified in JSON files following a comprehensible and well documented format.[11]
^"Gaia Sky data formats". Gaia Sky documentation. Zentrum für Astronomie Heidelberg. Archived from the original on 23 October 2021. Retrieved 9 October 2019.