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Science Visualizations Go Hollywood
December 16, 2005--Computer animation software is not just for making movies anymore
-- scientists and visualization experts are taking tips from the big screen to bring science to the public.
At last week's meeting of the American Geophysical Union in San Francisco, NASA unveiled the world premiere of its
new seven-minute movie, "A Tour of the Cryosphere."
The Earth's cryosphere (from a Greek word, kryos, which means "cold") includes all the the sea
and freshwaterice, snow, glaciers, frozen ground and permafrost.
Scientists at NASA, at the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA),
and at the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) combined their scientific data, then applied state-of-the-art
computer animation software to visualize the science. Michael Starobin, senior producer at NASA/Goddard
Space Flight Center's Science Visualization Studio in Greenbelt, Md., explained that merging all of
this data into a movie that appears to be done in one single shot was no easy feat.
"We used computer-animation software like Maya and plug-ins like RenderMan, which
are the same programs that Pixar animation studios used in the making of The Incredibles and
Finding Nemo movies, but we stretched the software to its limit," says Starobin.
As a result, viewers are treated to a fact-filled and visually stunning tour of Antarctica and the Arctic in
a few short minutes. But, the tour takes an occasional step in closer. Viewers not only see a broad view of
the retreating ice caps, but they also get the chance to lean in and watch scientific data come to life as
they watch Antarctica's Larsen B ice shelf collapse.
Waleed Abdalati, a geographer and head of NASA's Cryospheric Sciences Branch in Washington, D.C., says
that everyone can watch the tour and learn something new.
"By translating real data -- all the bits and bites -- into compelling visuals, we can understand the planet
in new ways," says Abdalati.
Although scientists are learning new things all the time about the cryosphere, this tour gives anyone who
watches it a comprehensive look at what scientists have learned, while making it as fun and exciting as your
favorite movies. Best viewing of the movie requires a high-speed connection.
For More Information:
Waleed Abdalati
Waleed.Abdalati@nasa.gov
NASA Headquarters
Washington, DC
202-358-0746
Michael Starobin
michael.a.starobin.1@gsfc.nasa.gov
NASA/Goddard Space Flight Center
Greenbelt, MD
301-286-4509
Contact:
Emilie Lorditch, elorditc@aip.org
American Institute of Physics
301-209-3029
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