Microsoft and
NASA also plan to make available images from a camera aboard NASA's
Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter when publicly released starting this fall.
With a scheduled May launch, the LRO will spend at least a year in a
low, polar orbit approximately 30 miles above the lunar surface
collecting detailed information about the lunar environment.
"This collaboration between Microsoft and NASA will enable people
around the world to explore new images of the moon and Mars in a rich,
interactive environment through the WorldWide Telescope," Tony Hey,
corporate vice president of Microsoft External Research, said in a
statement. "WorldWide Telescope serves as a powerful tool for computer science researchers, educators and students to explore space and experience the excitement of computer science."
To further complement the collaboration, Ames Research Center is
developing a suite of planetary data processing tools that will convert
historic and current space imagery data into a variety of formats and
images of the moon, Mars and other planetary bodies.
"NASA has a wealth of images and data, from the Apollo and Lunar
Orbiter missions to Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter and the Mercury
Messenger flybys," said Chris C. Kemp, CIO at Ames. "This collaboration
makes it possible for NASA to leverage exciting new Microsoft
technologies to make NASA's data—and America's space program—more
accessible to the public."
Microsoft's WWT is a Web 2.0 visualization environment that
functions as a virtual telescope, bringing together imagery from both
ground-based and space-based telescopes. The application allows users
to pan and zoom in on images without distorted views at the poles.
"Making NASA's scientific and astronomical data more accessible to the
public is a high priority for NASA, especially given the new
administration's recent emphasis on open government and transparency,"
said Ed Weiler, associate administrator for NASA's Science Mission
Directorate.