
Two New Ways to Explore the Virtual Universe, in Vivid 3-D
Date: Wednesday, May 14th, 2008 (CDT ) Topic: Cosmology & Astronomy
The skies may be the next frontier in travel, yet not even the wealthiest space tourist can zoom out to, say, the Crab Nebula, the Trapezium Cluster or Eta Carinae, a star 100 times more massive than the Sun and 7,500 light-years away.
But those galactic destinations and thousands of others can now be toured and explored at the controls of a computer mouse, with the constellations, stars and space dust displayed in vivid detail and animated imagery across the screen. The project, the WorldWide Telescope, is the culmination of years of work by researchers at Microsoft, and the Web site and free downloadable software are available starting on Tuesday, at www.WorldWideTelescope.org.
There are many online astronomy sites, but astronomers say the Microsoft entry sets a new standard in three-dimensional representation of vast amounts data plucked from space telescopes, the ease of navigation, the visual experience and features like guided tours narrated by experts.
“Exploring
the virtual universe is incredibly smooth and seamless like a
top-of-the-line computer game, but also the science is correct,” said
Alexander Szalay, a professor of astronomy and physics at Johns
Hopkins. “No sacrifices have been made. It just feels as if you are in
it.”
The WorldWide Telescope
project spans astronomy, education and computing. Educators hope its
rich images, animation and design for self-navigation will help entice
computer-gaming young people into astronomy and science in general. The
space service, astronomers say, could also become valuable in
scientific discovery, especially with a professional version being
developed with the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics.
Like many fields of
science, astronomy has become digitized and data rich in recent years,
making it an ideal proving ground for advanced computing techniques in
data mining, visualization and searching.
So it is scarcely
surprising that the other major company with an ambitious astronomy
service online is Google. The Internet search giant first layered
astronomical data and images onto Google Earth last August.
The switch to astronomy in
Google Sky amounts to looking out into space instead of down on Earth.
Two months ago, Google introduced a Web-based version of Google Sky,
layering space images on its searchable map service.
Microsoft and Google are
spirited competitors and antagonists in the rough-and-tumble commercial
markets of Internet search and software. Yet in online astronomy, both
sides proclaim mutual respect and say their sole rivalry is in
scientific discovery and public education. They say they have no plans
to sell advertising on the astronomy sites.
Scientists and educators applaud the interest and investment by the two.
“It’s really encouraging
that both Microsoft and Google are there, pushing these powerful tools
for science education forward,” said Daniel Atkins, director of the
National Science Foundation’s Office of Cyberinfrastructure, which
focuses on using new technology in learning and research.
There may be no space war
between Microsoft and Google, but their offerings reflect their
different cultures. The WorldWide Telescope results from careful
planning and lengthy development in a research division. It has the
richer graphics and it created special software to present the images
of spherical space objects with less polar distortion. WorldWide
Telescope requires downloading a hefty piece of software, and it runs
only on Microsoft Windows.
Google Sky started as a
Google “20 percent” project, in which engineers can spend time on
anything they choose. Google Earth, where Google Sky began, requires a
software download, but its Web-based version, which came out in March,
does not. The Google culture encourages engineers to put new things
onto the Internet quickly and keep improving them, a philosophy geared
to constant evolution instead of finished products.
Despite differences, the
companies share motivations. Lior Ron, Google Sky product manager, said
the astronomy focus “says a lot about the interests of the people in
both companies.” At Google, Mr. Ron, 31, is one of a group of astronomy
enthusiasts. He built his own telescope as a teenager and went to
astronomy camps in his native Israel. He said he almost joined private
space industry last year instead of Google.
A personal fascination in
astronomy has also energized work at Microsoft. Jonathan Fay, 42, the
lead software engineer on the project, has built an observatory, with a
dome eight feet in diameter, in his backyard in suburban Seattle.
The inspiration for the
WorldWide Telescope, and much of the early work, came from Jim Gray, a
renowned computer scientist who disappeared last year while sailing
alone off northern California. Mr. Gray had long been intrigued by the
computing challenges of presenting map and satellite images online. His
project to show aerial map images of the world, TerraServer, went up in
June 1998, a few months before Google was founded. Mr. Gray then worked
for years with astronomers on the concept he presented in Science in
September 2001, “The World-wide Telescope.” Mr. Szalay was co-author.
Mr. Gray’s vision was
largely about making the flood of astronomical data accessible and
usable for scientists. The project began to take on its current look
and design in fall 2006, when Curtis Wong started working on it full
time. Mr. Wong, another amateur astronomer, heads a new media research
group at Microsoft, which he joined in 1998. He is the creator of
award-winning multimedia CD-ROMs on subjects like the Barnes art
collection, Leonardo da Vinci and the making of the atomic bomb.
When he came to the
astronomy project, Mr. Wong recalled telling Mr. Gray, “This is great,
but let’s bring all this data and make it available, accessible and
engaging to the public.”
A conversation with Mr.
Wong, 54, is different from most around the Microsoft campus in
Redmond, Wash., which is mainly populated by engineers, marketers and
business managers. Mr. Wong speaks of the WorldWide Telescope’s
allowing citizen explorers to make and post virtual tours. One tour on
the site is by a 6-year-old boy from Toronto. “What we’re starting with
is just a foundation,” Mr. Wong said. “When it really gets interesting
is when more and more stories populate the WorldWide Telescope.”
Young people today are used
to sharing stories, on MySpace, Facebook, YouTube and elsewhere.
Educators hope that the WorldWide Telescope can entice them to take an
interest in astronomy. “Science has a bad rap because it is seen as a
dry accumulation of facts,” said Roy R. Gould, a science education
expert at the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics. “But this is
a visually beautiful environment where you can explore, create and
share.”
Copyright: New York Times
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