Computer Graphics Group Selects NASA Earth Visuals for Showcase

GREENBELT, Md., June 19, 2012 — (PRNewswire) — �An annual conference that presents and publishes the best in computer graphics and technical research chose a NASA excerpt from the presentation, "Dynamic Earth: Exploring Earth's Climate Engine," as one of its select entries of 2012.

The computer visualization is titled "Coronal Mass Ejection and Ocean/Wind Circulation." It is also published today (Tues., June 19) as the one hundredth story for the award-winning NASA Viz iPad application.

The Association for Computer Machinery's Special Interest Group on Computer Graphics and Interactive Techniques is known as SIGGRAPH and is widely considered the most prestigious forum of its kind.

"Major Hollywood studios submit pieces, so there is a high standard," says Joshua Grow, SIGGRAPH Computer Animation Festival Chair, Los Angeles. "Clearly NASA has exceeded that standard with their submission."

The full-length "Dynamic Earth" presentation is narrated by actor Liam Neeson and illustrates how equilibrium between Earth's climatic systems sustains life and what could happen if the balance is tipped.

The immersive 24-minute, ultra-high resolution, fulldome show is a joint production of NASA's Scientific Visualization Studio (SVS) in Greenbelt, Md., Spitz Creative Media in Chadds Ford, Pa., the National Center for Supercomputing Applications (NCSA) at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, Ill., the Denver Museum of Nature & Science, Colo. and Thomas Lucas Productions in Ossining, NY.

Lucas, who wrote, directed and co-produced "Dynamic Earth," says that he's proud that nearly all the visualizations are based on real-world data.

"The NASA SVS team is doing pioneering work in visualizing both simulation and satellite data," Lucas says. "In the process, they are delivering special insights into the way our Earth works and how it's now changing."

The excerpt accepted by SIGGRAPH shows how uneven heating from the sun drives the air and ocean currents that produce the Earth's climate.

In the animation, a giant explosion of magnetic energy from the sun, called a coronal mass ejection, slams into and is deflected by the Earth's powerful magnetic field. The sun also continually sends out streams of light and radiation energy. Earth's atmosphere acts like a shield, blocking quite a bit of this energy.

Much of what makes it through is reflected back into space by clouds, ice and snow. The energy that remains helps to drive the Earth system, powering a remarkable planetary engine – the climate. It becomes the energy that feeds swirling wind and ocean currents as cold air and surface waters move toward the equator and warm air and water moves toward the poles – all in an attempt to equalize temperatures around the world.

"'Dynamic Earth,' the show is also going around the world," says Horace Mitchell of NASA's Scientific Visualization Studio (SVS). "It's currently being dubbed into Spanish, Arabic, Turkish and Greek."

The show is now playing at the Smithsonian National Air and Space Museum in Washington, DC, at the Museum of Science and History in Jacksonville, Fla., and will launch at the Museum of Science, Boston this summer. The show has also been licensed to more than 20 schools, museums and other locations.

The 2012 SIGGRAPH conference and exhibition takes place August 5 to 9, 2012 at the Los Angeles Convention Center. The 'Dynamic Earth' excerpt will be one of only 31 presentations featured in its "Electronic Theatre" during the Computer Animation Festival.

For more information and a movie trailer for "Dynamic Earth," visit:

www.dynamicearth.spitzcreativemedia.com/

For more information about NASA programs, visit:

www.nasa.gov

SOURCE NASA

Contact:
NASA
Web: http://www.nasa.gov

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