Archive for miles per hour

Evansville Astronomy Expert Explains Russian Meteor Blast

It’s video that has grabbed the world’s attention.  A meteor streaked through the skies of Russia Friday morning injuring about 1,000 people.  The fire ball was caught on camera.

It looked like the sky was falling and sounded like a war was beginning.

“Asteroids of this size are really difficult to see. They’re faint and by the time you see them, they’re right on top of us,” Mitch Luman said.
 
A Russian meteor blast injured at least 1,000 people.  The vast majority of injuries are not believed to be serious.  The deafening blast caused panic.  Officials say the meteor exploded with a flash and boom that shattered glass in buildings, and knocked down a wall at a factory. 

“This meteor was moving at 33,000 miles per hour. Keep in mind, the speed of sound is only 768 miles per hour, so they actually saw this streak through the sky and then took a minute or two for the sound or the shock-wave to catch up and that’s what caused all the damage,” Chief Meteorologist Wayne Hart said.

“But the heating was so great that the front part was hot and the back part was cold that it couldn’t withstand the forces of the heat and the thermal, it just exploded and the explosion was equal to many thousands of tons of dynamite,” Luman said.
 
Astronomy expert, Mitch Luman says people shouldn’t be surprised by this because there’s 100 million objects of this size in the earth’s orbit alone, and the earth is a tiny target.  Nasa describing this as a tiny asteroid.

“About the size of a Harley that weighed maybe 10 tons, so there won’t be a lot of material left over, but whatever it was made out of, it was iron and nickel and it was very durable because it came all the way through the atmosphere before it exploded,” Luman said.
 
Luman says evacuation orders could be given if a large enough object is seen far enough a way, but today’s bright white streak was small and tough to see.  He says an event like this can be expected on the planet about once a decade.

This all happened just hours before an asteroid passed close to earth.  Astronomers say the two events are not related.

Article source: http://tristatehomepage.com/fulltext-news?nxd_id=587292

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NASA’s Curiosity Mars Landing; 7 Minutes of Terror [VIDEO]


ForexTV NewsDesk
  |  June 23 2012 7:00 EDT

ForexTV.com (New York) by Timothy Kelly

 

At the precise moment that NASA engineers receive a radio signal from the Mars rover,  Curiosity, that it has entered the top of Martian atmosphere, the rover will have already met its fate on the Martian surface…as a successful landing, or a debris field.  Mars is so far away that it takes over fourteen minutes for a communication signal to reach earth.

The communication latency is only a small obstacle in the effort to land a probe on a planet approximately 78 million miles away.  The actual distance from earth to Mars does vary depending on the orbit cycle anywhere from 36 million miles to 250 million miles, with each planet hurtling through space at speeds over 10,000 miles per hour. Curiosity will slam into the Martian atmosphere at a speed of 13.000 miles per hour.

From the top of Mars’ atmosphere to the planet surface takes seven minutes.  Engineers at the California Institute of Technology’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory have the challenge of going from 13,000 miles per hour to zero in seven minutes to safely touch down on Mars.  Those closest to the project have dubbed this entry sequence window “7 minutes of terror.”  It is the most critical time in the years-long journey and there is zero margin for error.  Further complicating the challenge to rapidly reducing entry into the Martian atmosphere is the fact that Mars’ atmosphere is 100 times less dense than Earth. 

The drag created from entry into the thin atmosphere  will slow the space craft to a mere 1,000 miles per hour and generate heat build-up at 1600 degrees on the heat shields; at which point a 100 pound parachute will deploy creating a massive 9G jolt.  After the chute deploys, the heat shields will be jettisoned, giving sight to craft’s radar array.  Now travelling at 200 mph, a jet-powered sky crane harnessing the Curiosity Rover will separate from the backshell, which is still tethered to the chute.  The sky crane will perform an evasive maneuver so as not to get tangled in the chute and lower the rover to the surface and jettison itself away from the landing site.

The Cuiosity is expected to touch down at precicely 10:31pm PDT on August 5, 2012.
 

This video shows what this process might look like:

 

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Article source: http://www.forextv.com/forex-news-story/nasa-s-curiosity-mars-landing-7-minutes-of-terror-video-1

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Comet Thatcher’s Yearly Attack on Earth – Lyrid Meteor Shower | Video

Slamming into the atmosphere at nearly 110,000 miles per hour, 15 to 20 meteors per hour could shower the night sky and produce some fireballs. The annual skywatching event peaks on April 21st, 2012.

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NASA Releases Stunning Video of Near-Miss Asteroid

A massive asteroid paid Earth a very close visit Tuesday and astronomers were able to capture stunning imagery of the near-miss rock, including a mini-movie put together by NASA (below).

Asteroid 2005 YU55 zoomed by the planet inside the Moon’s orbit and reached its closest proximity at 6:28 p.m. ET when it came within 201,700 miles of Earth. It’s the largest object on record to pass this close to us with our foreknowledge. And just like that, 2005 YU55 was zooming off into deep space once again at approximately 29,000 miles per hour.

“By animating a sequence of radar images, we can see more surface detail than is visible otherwise,” Lance Benner, a radar astronomer at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory said in a statement upon the release of the space agency’s imaging sequence. “The animation reveals a number of puzzling structures on the surface that we don’t yet understand. To date, we’ve seen less than one-half of the surface, so we expect more surprises.”

The asteroid, which is a quarter of a mile in diameter or about the size of a city block, was never a threat to strike the Earth, according to astronomers. But if it had, experts said it would have “deliver[ed] a kinetic-energy punch equivalent to several thousand megatons of TNT … the kind of potential threat that outer-space sentries lose sleep over.”

Asteroid 2005 YU55 was discovered, you guessed it, back in 2005 by Robert McMillan at Steward Observatory’s Spacewatch Telescope in Arizona. The likely carbon-rich asteroid has a very round shape as documented in new images captured by two massive radio telescopes in California and Puerto Rico, and it spins around in a relatively long rotation period of 18 to 20 hours.

This particular asteroid has crossed our path before and is expected to fly by again. The last time 2005 YU55 swung by was in April 2010, while another somewhat smaller rock, 2010 XC15, is now known to have come even closer to Earth in 1976 than 2005 YU55 did earlier today, though at the time, nobody observed that passing.

The next time an object this large is expected to pass this close to the planet is in 2028, reports Scientific American, so space watchers are preparing to take advantage of a rare opportunity to observe an asteroid at relatively up-close range with ground-based telescopes.

For the top stories in tech, follow us on Twitter at @PCMag.

Article source: http://www.pcmag.com/article2/0,2817,2396086,00.asp

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NASA’s 25 years to save earth from the ‘Doomsday asteroid’

A 20-MILLION-TONNE asteroid is hurtling through space at 23,000 miles per hour, on a collision course with Earth. But fear not — NASA has 25 years to stop it.

When Paul Chodas and Steve Chesley arrived at NASA‘s Jet Propulsion Laboratory, in California’s San Gabriel Mountains, on October 6, 2008, they assumed it would be a normal day.

The scientists worked for the space administration’s Near Earth Object (NEO) programme, a team tasked with identifying comets, asteroids and meteors that potentially pose a threat to Earth. On that Monday morning, Mr Chodas noticed an asteroid about the size of a truck beyond the moon‘s orbit. It was on a collision course with Earth.

Mr Chesley began punching co-ordinates into his machine, to compute exactly where it would make contact. “I pulled out my ‘National Geographic‘ atlas and Steve went on Google to look it up. We both reached the same conclusion: it was going to hit Sudan the following morning.”

“We knew it was small and we were certain most of it would break up in the Earth’s atmosphere so it didn’t pose a hazard,” Mr Chodas says. And as it happened, its remnants plunged into desert sand. Disaster was averted. That time. However, there are plenty more where that came from.

Earlier this year, news networks around the world warned of a ‘doomsday asteroid’. Dubbed the ‘continent killer’, Apophis is a 250m-wide, 20-million-tonne chunk of rock, ice and dust, which apparently could ‘land’ on Earth, at about 23,000 miles per hour, in 25 years’ time — ie in most of our lifetimes.

There are two scenarios: the first is that Apophis will fly by in April 2029, and that’s the last we’ll see or hear of it.

The second is that it’ll pass through what scientists refer to as a “keyhole” — a small area of space that can alter the asteroid’s course due to Earth’s gravity. If this happens, it’ll be on a massive collision course with us, likely to be on April 13, 2036.

An even likelier scenario is that we won’t have to do anything at all. “This is nothing you have to panic about,” says Amy Mainzer, a NASA research scientist. “It’s a reasonably infrequent thing that doesn’t happen very often.”

Not very often. It’s those three words that, for some reason, just don’t seem enough. ( Daily Telegraph, London)

- Alex Hannaford in London

Irish Independent

Article source: http://www.independent.ie/world-news/nasas-25-years-to-save-earth-from-the-doomsday-asteroid-2921450.html

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Electric Airplane Wins $1.35 Million Prize From NASA

NASA announced this week it has awarded the $1.35 million prize for its CAFE Green Flight Challenge to the team from Pipistrel-USA.com. The twin-fuselage, four-seat electric airplane beat out the eGenius team from Germany during two competition days held last week at the Sonoma County Airport in California. The eGenius team will take home $120,000 for second place and another $10,000 for a separate competition from the Lindbergh Electric Aircraft Prize for the quietest aircraft during the week.

Of the 14 teams originally signed up for the competition, only four made it to California, and only three met the requirements for the competition. The event was managed by the Comparative Aircraft Flight Efficiency foundation under an agreement with NASA and sponsored by Google.

“NASA congratulates Pipistrel-USA.com for proving that ultra-efficient aviation is within our grasp,” said Joe Parrish, NASA’s acting chief technologist, in a statement. “We’ve shown that electric aircraft have moved beyond science fiction and are now in the realm of practice.”

After the final day of competition on Thursday, NASA closely guarded the data from the flights until the winner was announced. On Monday the agency said both electric aircraft exceeded the requirement of flying at least 200 miles on the energy equivalent of less than a gallon of gas while averaging 100 miles per hour with two people on board. In fact, NASA says both the Pipistrel and eGenius managed to meet the requirements using the equivalent of just half a gallon of gasoline, meaning they averaged close to 400 passenger miles per gallon at over 100 mph.

A third team flying a gasoline-powered Phoenix motorglider did not meet the efficiency requirements to win a prize.

Pipistrel general manager Ivo Boscarol told us minutes after the competition ended on Thursday that he was confident the team would do well.

“Everything performed better than anticipated,” he said enthusiastically as the airplane was being inspected after the flight.

Boscarol was confident then of winning the prize, adding if one of the other teams won, “they really deserve it.”

The Pipistrel Taurus G4 that flew in the competition (pictured above) was developed and built in Slovenia as a technology demonstrator for the airplane maker. The company does not plan on building production versions of the airplane, but does plan on using the liquid-cooled electric powertrain in a four-seat airplane it is developing and hopes to fly next year.

We will have more photos from the competition and details about the aircraft from the engineers and pilots in an upcoming gallery.

Photo: Jason Paur/Wired.com

Article source: http://www.wired.com/autopia/2011/10/electric-airplane-wins-1-35-million-prize-from-nasa/

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Out of space in outer space: Special report on NASA’s ‘space junk’ plans

The debris consists of various objects, such as decommissioned satellites and exhausted boosters, but the vast majority of the particles are less than one centimetre across. 16,094 pieces of debris were being tracked as of July, although estimates put the current number at over 22,000. The total number of fragments is thought to be as high as tens of millions. While most of the debris is very small, some of it is travelling at speeds as high as 17,500 “miles per hour”

The International Space Station sometimes has to dodge larger fragments, and in June its crew was forced to prepare to evacuate due to a close encounter with debris.

The UK Space Agency told Wikinews that space flight “is likely to be made more difficult” by the debris. However, communications will “[n]ot directly” be affected, “but if the GEO ring became unusable, there is no other altitude at which objects appear [']geo-stationary['] and so all antennas on the ground would then have to move in order to track the motion of the satellites”.

Donald J. Kessler, the lead researcher and former head of NASA’s Orbital Debris Program Office, said that “[t]he current space environment is growing increasingly hazardous to spacecraft and astronauts,” and suggested that “NASA needs to determine the best path forward for tackling the multifaceted problems caused by meteoroids and orbital debris that put human and robotic space operations at risk.”

The current space environment is growing increasingly hazardous to spacecraft and astronauts

Two events are thought to be the largest individual sources of space debris. Kessler said that “[t]hose two single events doubled the amount of fragments in Earth orbit and completely wiped out what we had done in the last 25 years”.

The first of these was a controversial 2007 Chinese anti-satellite weapon test, which smashed the decommissioned weather satellite Fengyun-1C into approximately 150,000 fragments over a centimetre in size—making up roughly twenty percent of all tracked objects—537 miles above the Earth’s surface.

The Chinese government has so far failed to respond to Wikinews’s queries regarding the incident.

The other is a 2009 collision between twelve-year-old active satellite Iridium 33 and the defunct Russian Strela-2M satellite Kosmos-2251—both weighing in excess of 1,000 lbs (454 kg)—that occurred 490 miles over Siberia, the first such collision. The Iridium satellite was replaced within 22 days, according to Iridium Communications, who operated it.

In a statement released to Wikinews, Iridium Communications said that they “received no warning of the impending collision. Although commercial projections of close encounters (commonly called conjunctions) were available, the accuracy of those projections was not sufficient to allow collision avoidance action to be taken.” They also made the assurance that the Air Force Space Command and United States Strategic Command now provide them with information through the Joint Space Operations Center, and that “when necessary, [they] maneuver [their] satellites based on this information to avoid potential collisions. [They] believe this is a substantial first step in better information sharing between the government and industry and support even more robust interaction which can provide better and more efficient constellation operation.”

Iridium expressed their support for “[l]ong-term investment to improve Space Situational Awareness” and “[i]mproved information sharing between industry and the U.S. government”, as well as more “[g]overnment support for policy and processes which would permit sharing of high-accuracy data as required to allow reliable assessment and warning” and “[i]ncreased cooperation between the government and U.S. and foreign commercial operators.”

They maintained that “the Iridium constellation is uniquely designed to withstand such an event. Because of the resilient and distributed nature of the Iridium constellation, the effects of the loss of a single satellite were relatively minor”, and that “any other system, commercial or military, which experienced the loss of a satellite, would have suffered significant operational degradation for a period of months if not years.” Nonetheless, the company is “concerned over the increasing level of risk to operations resulting from the debris in space.”

The report makes more than thirty findings, and more than twenty recommendations to NASA. None of the recommendations regard how to clean up the debris. However, it does cite a report by the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA), which suggested various possible techniques for catching and removing space debris, such as magnetic nets.

 

However, international law does not allow one country to collect another’s debris. George J. Gleghorn, vice chair of the committee, observed that “[t]he Cold War is over, but the acute sensitivity regarding satellite technology remains”.

The debris will, in time, be pulled into the earth’s atmosphere—where it will burn up—by gravity, but more debris is being created faster than this can happen.

The problem of space debris is similar to a host of other environmental problems and public concerns.

The report recommends collaborating with the United States Department of State on “economic, technological, political, and legal considerations.” As already mentioned, international law does not allow one country to collect another’s debris.

According to the report, “[t]he problem of space debris is similar to a host of other environmental problems and public concerns characterized by possibly significant differences between the short- and long-run damage accruing to society … Each has small short-run effects but, if left unaddressed, will have much larger impacts on society in the future.”

A spokesperson for the UK Space Agency told Wikinews that the organisation “does not have any plans to get directly involved with [the clean-up] initiative but through its involvement with NASA in the Inter-Agency Space Debris Coordination Committee, it is conducting studies to identify which objects present the biggest hazard and how many objects may need to be removed and from where.” It says that the viability of such an operation is “a question of treating the symptom or the cause of the problem. Building more physical protection is costly and if the environment deteriorates too far, becomes unviable. It is best to treat the root cause, the presence of debris in orbit, and remove the large objects before they can break up into many thousands of uncontrolled fragments capable of destroying a satellite on impact.”

The spokesperson also pointed out that “[u]nder current licensing regimes (such as in the UK), countries are now obliging operators to remove satellites from crowded regions of space at the end of operational life”.

Article source: http://boundarysentinel.com/news/out-space-outer-space-special-report-nasas-space-junk-plans-13653

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Out of space in outer space: Special report on NASA’s ‘space junk’ plans

The debris consists of various objects, such as decommissioned satellites and exhausted boosters, but the vast majority of the particles are less than one centimetre across. 16,094 pieces of debris were being tracked as of July, although estimates put the current number at over 22,000. The total number of fragments is thought to be as high as tens of millions. While most of the debris is very small, some of it is travelling at speeds as high as 17,500 “miles per hour”

The International Space Station sometimes has to dodge larger fragments, and in June its crew was forced to prepare to evacuate due to a close encounter with debris.

The UK Space Agency told Wikinews that space flight “is likely to be made more difficult” by the debris. However, communications will “[n]ot directly” be affected, “but if the GEO ring became unusable, there is no other altitude at which objects appear [']geo-stationary['] and so all antennas on the ground would then have to move in order to track the motion of the satellites”.

Donald J. Kessler, the lead researcher and former head of NASA’s Orbital Debris Program Office, said that “[t]he current space environment is growing increasingly hazardous to spacecraft and astronauts,” and suggested that “NASA needs to determine the best path forward for tackling the multifaceted problems caused by meteoroids and orbital debris that put human and robotic space operations at risk.”

The current space environment is growing increasingly hazardous to spacecraft and astronauts

Two events are thought to be the largest individual sources of space debris. Kessler said that “[t]hose two single events doubled the amount of fragments in Earth orbit and completely wiped out what we had done in the last 25 years”.

The first of these was a controversial 2007 Chinese anti-satellite weapon test, which smashed the decommissioned weather satellite Fengyun-1C into approximately 150,000 fragments over a centimetre in size—making up roughly twenty percent of all tracked objects—537 miles above the Earth’s surface.

The Chinese government has so far failed to respond to Wikinews’s queries regarding the incident.

The other is a 2009 collision between twelve-year-old active satellite Iridium 33 and the defunct Russian Strela-2M satellite Kosmos-2251—both weighing in excess of 1,000 lbs (454 kg)—that occurred 490 miles over Siberia, the first such collision. The Iridium satellite was replaced within 22 days, according to Iridium Communications, who operated it.

In a statement released to Wikinews, Iridium Communications said that they “received no warning of the impending collision. Although commercial projections of close encounters (commonly called conjunctions) were available, the accuracy of those projections was not sufficient to allow collision avoidance action to be taken.” They also made the assurance that the Air Force Space Command and United States Strategic Command now provide them with information through the Joint Space Operations Center, and that “when necessary, [they] maneuver [their] satellites based on this information to avoid potential collisions. [They] believe this is a substantial first step in better information sharing between the government and industry and support even more robust interaction which can provide better and more efficient constellation operation.”

Iridium expressed their support for “[l]ong-term investment to improve Space Situational Awareness” and “[i]mproved information sharing between industry and the U.S. government”, as well as more “[g]overnment support for policy and processes which would permit sharing of high-accuracy data as required to allow reliable assessment and warning” and “[i]ncreased cooperation between the government and U.S. and foreign commercial operators.”

They maintained that “the Iridium constellation is uniquely designed to withstand such an event. Because of the resilient and distributed nature of the Iridium constellation, the effects of the loss of a single satellite were relatively minor”, and that “any other system, commercial or military, which experienced the loss of a satellite, would have suffered significant operational degradation for a period of months if not years.” Nonetheless, the company is “concerned over the increasing level of risk to operations resulting from the debris in space.”

The report makes more than thirty findings, and more than twenty recommendations to NASA. None of the recommendations regard how to clean up the debris. However, it does cite a report by the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA), which suggested various possible techniques for catching and removing space debris, such as magnetic nets.

 

However, international law does not allow one country to collect another’s debris. George J. Gleghorn, vice chair of the committee, observed that “[t]he Cold War is over, but the acute sensitivity regarding satellite technology remains”.

The debris will, in time, be pulled into the earth’s atmosphere—where it will burn up—by gravity, but more debris is being created faster than this can happen.

The problem of space debris is similar to a host of other environmental problems and public concerns.

The report recommends collaborating with the United States Department of State on “economic, technological, political, and legal considerations.” As already mentioned, international law does not allow one country to collect another’s debris.

According to the report, “[t]he problem of space debris is similar to a host of other environmental problems and public concerns characterized by possibly significant differences between the short- and long-run damage accruing to society … Each has small short-run effects but, if left unaddressed, will have much larger impacts on society in the future.”

A spokesperson for the UK Space Agency told Wikinews that the organisation “does not have any plans to get directly involved with [the clean-up] initiative but through its involvement with NASA in the Inter-Agency Space Debris Coordination Committee, it is conducting studies to identify which objects present the biggest hazard and how many objects may need to be removed and from where.” It says that the viability of such an operation is “a question of treating the symptom or the cause of the problem. Building more physical protection is costly and if the environment deteriorates too far, becomes unviable. It is best to treat the root cause, the presence of debris in orbit, and remove the large objects before they can break up into many thousands of uncontrolled fragments capable of destroying a satellite on impact.”

The spokesperson also pointed out that “[u]nder current licensing regimes (such as in the UK), countries are now obliging operators to remove satellites from crowded regions of space at the end of operational life”.

Article source: http://castlegarsource.com/news/out-space-outer-space-special-report-nasas-space-junk-plans-13653

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Piece of falling satellite could hit you — but it’s not likely

CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. — Try to remain calm.

You are one of roughly 7 billion people who could be struck by a jagged piece of metal from a dead NASA satellite tumbling from space later this month.

Statistically, there’s a 1 in 3,200 chance someone could be hit by one of the 26 objects — the biggest, more than 300 pounds — expected to crash into Earth’s surface, at possibly hundreds of miles per hour.

But NASA says the odds that person will be you are far more remote, and it’s much likelier that remnants of the nearly 12,500-pound Upper Atmosphere Research Satellite will drop harmlessly into an ocean or desolate region. There’s “a very, very low probability of anyone being hurt or anyone’s property being damaged,” said Nick Johnson, chief scientist for NASA’s Orbital Debris Program at Johnson Space Center in Houston.

Then why all the fuss?

NASA and the U.S. Air Force briefed reporters Friday on plans to monitor the climate satellite’s movement. It’s the largest NASA satellite in some time to make an uncontrolled re-entry. Debris could rain anywhere between northern Canada and southern South America, so “you’ve pretty much encompassed all 7 billion people on the planet,” Johnson said.

If any person or property is impacted, it would be a first from manmade space debris in the more than 50 years vehicles have been launched into orbit. That’s surprising, considering small objects drop from space regularly — more than one a day on average last year, Johnson said. Most burn up and never reach Earth.

Article source: http://www.freep.com/article/20110911/NEWS07/109110553/Piece-falling-satellite-could-hit-you-s-not-likely

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NASA Web App Lets You Roam the Solar System in 3D

image

Explore our solar system (and stalk some spacecraft) in real time and 3D.

If you’ve ever felt the need to casually breeze around the asteroid belt in 3D, this is for you. Using its vast data archives and some slightly dated animation models, NASA has created Eyes on the Solar System, a free web app that allows you to point-and-click your way around every aspect of our solar system in real time. You can even stalk the agency’s various spacecraft as they continue their present missions, or wind time back a few years to experience their past achievements.

Eyes on the Solar System lets you explore every aspect of our solar system at any point between 1950 and 2050. You can rotate the Earth and investigate each of the NASA satellites in our orbit, and also the Moon. Clicking on Voyager 2 really helps to put our solar system, and NASA’s achievements, into perspective. It looks like it’s barely moving, but its actual speed is roughly 35,000 miles per hour; the amount of time you have to spend zooming out before you can catch it in the same frame as Earth is really impressive. Although the graphics mean that none of the planets look particularly good up close, this app seems to be more about experiencing perspective than trying to see inside the lunar landing module.

The app is really easy to use, even if things can sometimes get a bit trippy when you’re using a touchpad rather than a mouse. NASA has released this handy YouTube tutorial to explain all you need to know to get started.

Source: NASA via Geek.com

Article source: http://www.escapistmagazine.com/news/view/112859-NASA-Web-App-Lets-You-Roam-the-Solar-System-in-3D

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