The Omnitheater is returning to its usual place atop the technology food chain.
When St. Paul's Science Museum of Minnesota initially launched the big-screen theater in 1978, it was one of only two Omnitheaters in existence.
When the museum moved from downtown to its current riverfront location in 1999, it installed the only convertible-dome theater in the country, meaning it could switch between a curved and a flat screen with the push of a button.
But over time, technology has a way of catching up with innovation.
That's why — after nine years of research and development, two years of testing, a summer of construction and $2.4 million — the Omnitheater is leapfrogging back to the state-of-the-art summit on Thursday by becoming only the third Imax digital laser dome theater in the world.
The new picture will be brighter, have greater contrast and resolution and truer colors.
"It changes the way light is put on the screen," explained Chris Demko, the theater's technical manager.
The old system used a xenon lamp to shine light through a prism. Some light leakage was inevitable, a drawback that doesn't exist with lasers.