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WorldWide Telescope

Started by jimmydeanno, May 13, 2008, 06:08:58 PM

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jimmydeanno

I just thought this might be neat for all you AEOs out there who are looking for a new way to get your cadets interested in space.

QuoteThe WorldWide Telescope (WWT) is a Web 2.0 visualization software environment that enables your computer to function as a virtual telescope—bringing together imagery from the best ground and space-based telescopes in the world for a seamless exploration of the universe.

Choose from a growing number of guided tours of the sky by astronomers and educators from some of the most famous observatories and planetariums in the country. Feel free at any time to pause the tour, explore on your own (with multiple information sources for objects at your fingertips), and rejoin the tour where you left off. Join Harvard Astronomer Alyssa Goodman on a journey showing how dust in the Milky Way Galaxy condenses into stars and planets. Take a tour with University of Chicago Cosmologist Mike Gladders two billion years into the past to see a gravitational lens bending the light from galaxies allowing you to see billions more years into the past.

WorldWide Telescope is created with the Microsoft® high performance Visual Experience Engine™ and allows seamless panning and zooming around the night sky, planets, and image environments. View the sky from multiple wavelenghts: See the x-ray view of the sky and zoom into bright radiation clouds, and then crossfade into the visible light view and discover the cloud remnants of a supernova explosion from a thousand years ago. Switch to the Hydrogen Alpha view to see the distribution and illumination of massive primordial hydrogen cloud structures lit up by the high energy radiation coming from nearby stars in the Milky Way. These are just two of many different ways to reveal the hidden structures in the universe with the WorldWide Telescope. Seamlessly pan and zoom from aerial views of the Moon and selected planets, as well as see their precise positions in the sky from any location on Earth and any time in the past or future with the Microsoft Visual Experience Engine.

WWT is a single rich application portal that blends terabytes of images, information, and stories from multiple sources over the Internet into a seamless, immersive, rich media experience. Kids of all ages will feel empowered to explore and understand the universe with its simple and powerful user interface.

Microsoft Research is dedicating WorldWide Telescope to the memory of Jim Gray and is releasing WWT as a free resource to the astronomy and education communities with the hope that it will inspire and empower people to explore and understand the universe like never before.

The system requirements are a little steep, but it is really cool.  Check it out: www.worldwidetelescope.org

If you have ten thousand regulations you destroy all respect for the law. - Winston Churchill

jimmydeanno

Here's a screenshot...
If you have ten thousand regulations you destroy all respect for the law. - Winston Churchill

Tubacap

I just downloaded it... That is awesome!  I am going to send it to my science department at work.
William Schlosser, Major CAP
NER-PA-001

notaNCO forever

It looks really great it should defiantly be good for teaching cadets.

SarDragon

Quote from: NCO forever on May 14, 2008, 08:54:18 PM
It looks really great it should defiantly be good for teaching cadets.

Defiantly? Or were you thinking definitely? Big difference there.
Dave Bowles
Maj, CAP
AT1, USN Retired
50 Year Member
Mitchell Award (unnumbered)
C/WO, CAP, Ret

notaNCO forever

Definitely not defiantly my bad.