Category Archives: Multiple media

Lynx VR releases “Space Shuttle Tour Cardboard”

An announcement from Lynx VR about their first app for google cardboard called Space Shuttle Tour Cardboard:

Space Shuttle Goes Virtual

Jan. 3, 2016 – You may recall some memories of the cardboard spaceship you once built, when you first encounter Lynx VR’s Space Shuttle Tour for Cardboard, as it launches in the Google Play store today. Behind its icon, a little cardboard space shuttle, hides a nifty app for Google Cardboard, which enables you to get up-close with the iconic Space Shuttle orbiter.

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The app allows you to explore more than fifty panoramic photos of the NASA Space Shuttle in virtual reality. You can look around to see the scenes in every direction, and hear the atmospheric sounds of the Vehicle Assembly Building, or VAB, at NASA’s Kennedy Space Center.

“Looking at the Shuttle in virtual reality gives a unique sense of scale,” said Thomas Papa, Co-Founder of Lynx VR. “It allows anyone with a modern smartphone and a cardboard viewer to experience being in and around the most technologically advanced machine ever engineered by man.”

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The 360-degree photos are grouped in six different sets, depicting different Shuttle sections and different angles of view, including locations such as the shuttle’s belly, the cargo bay and the flight deck.

You can get Space Shuttle Tour Cardboard for free, on Google Play.

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About Lynx VR: Lynx VR is a brand new virtual reality development studio from Portugal. It’s an interactive media and entertainment company for the VR world, bringing virtual reality apps and experiences to people all around the world.

Their products range from bite-sized VR entertainment to elaborate educational and scientific VR apps. Lynx VR believes that VR should be for everyone. Making their titles available on various platforms, and offering wide accessibility, is a vital part of the company’s strategy. Learn more at http://www.lynxvr.com

Wonderful view of earth rising above the Moon’s horizon

A great picture from the Moon:

NASA Releases New High-Res Earthrise Image

NASA’s Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter (LRO) recently captured a unique view of Earth from the spacecraft’s vantage point in orbit around the moon.

earth_and_limb_m1199291564l_color_2stretch_mask_0[1]Click for larger version.

“The image is simply stunning,” said Noah Petro, Deputy Project Scientist for LRO at NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland. “The image of the Earth evokes the famous ‘Blue Marble’ image taken by Astronaut Harrison Schmitt during Apollo 17, 43 years ago, which also showed Africa prominently in the picture.”

In this composite image we see Earth appear to rise over the lunar horizon from the viewpoint of the spacecraft, with the center of the Earth just off the coast of Liberia (at 4.04 degrees North, 12.44 degrees West). The large tan area in the upper right is the Sahara Desert, and just beyond is Saudi Arabia. The Atlantic and Pacific coasts of South America are visible to the left. On the moon, we get a glimpse of the crater Compton, which is located just beyond the eastern limb of the moon, on the lunar farside.

LRO was launched on June 18, 2009, and has collected a treasure trove of data with its seven powerful instruments, making an invaluable contribution to our knowledge about the moon. LRO experiences 12 earthrises every day; however the spacecraft is almost always busy imaging the lunar surface so only rarely does an opportunity arise such that its camera instrument can capture a view of Earth. Occasionally LRO points off into space to acquire observations of the extremely thin lunar atmosphere and perform instrument calibration measurements. During these movements sometimes Earth (and other planets) pass through the camera’s field of view and dramatic images such as the one shown here are acquired.

This image was composed from a series of images taken Oct. 12, when LRO was about 83 miles (134 kilometers) above the moon’s farside crater Compton. Capturing an image of the Earth and moon with LRO’s Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter Camera (LROC) instrument is a complicated task. First the spacecraft must be rolled to the side (in this case 67 degrees), then the spacecraft slews with the direction of travel to maximize the width of the lunar horizon in LROC’s Narrow Angle Camera image. All this takes place while LRO is traveling faster than 3,580 miles per hour (over 1,600 meters per second) relative to the lunar surface below the spacecraft!

The high-resolution Narrow Angle Camera (NAC) on LRO takes black-and-white images, while the lower resolution Wide Angle Camera (WAC) takes color images, so you might wonder how we got a high-resolution picture of the Earth in color. Since the spacecraft, Earth, and moon are all in motion, we had to do some special processing to create an image that represents the view of the Earth and moon at one particular time. The final Earth image contains both WAC and NAC information. WAC provides the color, and the NAC provides high-resolution detail.

“From the Earth, the daily moonrise and moonset are always inspiring moments,” said Mark Robinson of Arizona State University in Tempe, principal investigator for LROC. “However, lunar astronauts will see something very different: viewed from the lunar surface, the Earth never rises or sets. Since the moon is tidally locked, Earth is always in the same spot above the horizon, varying only a small amount with the slight wobble of the moon. The Earth may not move across the ‘sky’, but the view is not static. Future astronauts will see the continents rotate in and out of view and the ever-changing pattern of clouds will always catch one’s eye, at least on the nearside. The Earth is never visible from the farside; imagine a sky with no Earth or moon – what will farside explorers think with no Earth overhead?”

NASA’s first Earthrise image was taken with the Lunar Orbiter 1 spacecraft in 1966. Perhaps NASA’s most iconic Earthrise photo was taken by the crew of the Apollo 8 mission as the spacecraft entered lunar orbit on Christmas Eve Dec. 24, 1968. That evening, the astronauts — Commander Frank Borman, Command Module Pilot Jim Lovell, and Lunar Module Pilot William Anders — held a live broadcast from lunar orbit, in which they showed pictures of the Earth and moon as seen from their spacecraft. Said Lovell, “The vast loneliness is awe-inspiring and it makes you realize just what you have back there on Earth.”

Video: “In the land of Enchantment: The Epic Story of the Cassini Mission to Saturn”

The Silicon Valley Astronomy Lectures are sponsored by Foothill College, “in the heart of California’s Silicon Valley”. The “speakers over the years have included a wide range of noted scientists, explaining astronomical developments in everyday language”. More than 40 of the lectures are available on line in the archive at SVAstronomyLectures – YouTube.

In the most recent lecture, Dr. Carolyn Porco, the Imaging Team Leader for the Cassini mission to Saturn, showed

many of the magnificent mission images and explain the findings from both the main orbiter and the probe that landed on Titan, Saturn’s biggest moon. She also discusses the geysers on the moon Enceladus and what we have learned about the plumes that erupt.

 

Space arts: Astrophotographer André van der Hoeven + “Project Juno” – the story of Helen Sharman

A couple of space arts items:

*  The Art of Space Photography — Vantage — Medium – An interview with astrophotographer André van der Hoeven about the field and his techniques. Includes many wonderful images. Here is a video compilation that he has made:

Project Juno – Arts Theatre – This “is a one woman show about Helen Sharman’s remarkable story of becoming the First Briton in Space”. The show will be performed by Rachael Halliwell at the Harrogate Theatre in Yorkshire, England on Dec.3-5.

Helen Sharman won a competition to travel to the Russian Mir space station in 1991.

Here is a short video interview with Sharman: