Archive for the ‘Outreach & Education’ Category
Sunday, August 23rd, 2009
Originally posted at Spaced Out (Again):
We are going to try to Twitter a planning cycle for the HiRISE (http://hirise.lpl.arizona.edu) experiment. The idea is to give people a feeling of all the work we have to do to get images from Mars out of a very special piece of equipment. Here are a couple of things you need to know to follow what is going on.
The scientist in charge of the scientific support for the cycle is called the CIPP. For cycle 75, that is @nick_space. Nick will be assisted by his Post-Doc., Anya, who is @mozhetbyt
The targeting specialist ensures that the plan produced can be implemented and keeps the CIPP from doing anything stupid. The targeting specialist is called the HiTS and for cycle 75 that is @laughingrid.
The HiRISE project has its own Twitter account (@HiRISE) which can also be followed.
We will try to use #hitwycle as a search hashtag for tweets.
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Tags: CIPP, cycle, HiPlan, hits, planning, Targeting Specialist, twitter
Posted by Guest in HiRISE, Media Coverage, Outreach & Education, People, Uplink | 1 Comment »
Friday, July 17th, 2009

3-D anaglyph of PSP_008690_2075 & PSP_007688_2075
We were pleased to welcome
Linda Ronstadt (!!!) to the HiRISE Operations Center last week. We gave her and a few of her friends & family a presentation about the HiRISE mission, and we showed them some of our images in false color, 3-D and on the HiWall. Linda was incredibly nice and enthusiastic, and she had lots of great questions for us. Turns out rock stars love HiRISE!

At least, we hope she enjoyed it as much as we did!
Tags: HiROC, HiWall, lobby, People, tour, visit
Posted by Kite in Outreach & Education, People, Special Events | No Comments »
Thursday, June 25th, 2009

Governor Janet Napolitano visits the HiROC lobby in February 2006
Lately I’ve been helping out with the tours that we give of our operations center (HiROC) lobby and some public talks. Depending on the audience, we usually tell them a little bit about the HiRISE camera, its capabilities, and the MRO mission in general. We also talk about what we personally do at the operations center. The full-scale model of the camera and the “
HiWall” are really nice exhibits for visitors. The highlight is usually when we show off what HiRISE has accomplished: color
images,
3-D anaglyphs (everyone likes wearing those glasses!), and the recent addition of the
fly-through movies has been very popular.
My favorite part is when people have questions for us – even when I don’t know the answers.
Because, honestly, that’s what science is – we don’t always have the answers, but that’s what makes it exciting! It’s also fun to find out which aspects of the mission inspire other people, and I get a different perspective on what they think is interesting (versus just what I think is interesting!). Some of the questions are really good, too! We were talking with some middle-school students from El Paso, Texas, and their questions were so astute. One girl asked, “Does Mars have plate tectonics?” Another good question was, “How do we know about the interior of Mars?” These are great questions, and HiRISE is helping scientists to answer these and other questions, along with data from many other instruments studying Mars.
In case you were curious about these particular questions, like these kids were, here are some short answers and references for more information:
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Tags: core, crust, HiROC, HiWall, interior, lobby, mantle, plate tectonics, public, students, talk, tectonic, tour, visit
Posted by Kite in HiRISE, Images & Science, Outreach & Education | No Comments »
Thursday, April 30th, 2009
I was helping to prepare a presentation for a local high school, and I thought it would be cool to show them a picture of their school as HiRISE would see it. My first thought was the satellite layer in Google Maps. So I zoomed way in and took a screenshot. I wasn’t able to find a reference for the pixel scale of the satellite imagery (if anyone knows of one, please leave it in a comment!), so finally I just figured it out myself by using the Distance Measurement Tool. Turns out, if you zoom in as far as possible, the satellite images have almost exactly the same resolution as HiRISE! (This is true in Tucson, anyway; the coverage varies over different locations.) I thought this was a great way to visualize just how awesome HiRISE images are – just imagine looking at Mars like you can look at your home town on Google maps!
…I guess that makes the rovers like Mars StreetView.
This is my neighborhood as HiRISE would see it: (Look at all those pools! Tucson is not nearly as dry as Mars
)

Tags: Google, maps, pixel, resolution, rovers, satellite, scale, zoom
Posted by Kite in HiRISE, Outreach & Education | 2 Comments »
Thursday, April 2nd, 2009
New feature on the HiRISE website! HiFlyers made of released images like this one:
These are 11×17 PDFs showing cutouts of new releases, so you can print your own posters. Currently these are available for weekly releases starting 3/25/09 – look for more with each week’s new images!
They’re all available on this page. There are also links to the flyers on the individual image pages such as this one: http://hirise.lpl.arizona.edu/ESP_011425_1775 (Look for the “HiFLYER” link in the lower right hand side.)
Enjoy!
Tags: flyer, HiFlyer, poster, print, Website
Posted by Kite in HiRISE, Releases, Website | No Comments »
Friday, March 20th, 2009
NASA launched “2009 Mission Madness” setting favorite missions against each other. The first round ends today. To vote for your favorite missions, go to:
http://mission-madness.nasa.gov/mm/bracket.html
HiRISE is on board the Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter (MRO), but MRO in its bracket is currently losing to LCROSS, which is some moon impactor mission that hasn’t even launched yet! Ridiculous!
You can vote as many times as you want:
- Click on the mission
- Click on the blue arrow to move it into the next round
- Click the big basketball in the center to submit.
Also, you should vote for the Mars Exploration Rovers. And all things Mars related. Oh, and Voyager 1 and 2. Oh, and Cassini.
GO MRO!!!!
Tags: competition, March Madness, missions
Posted by RichardLeis in HiRISE, Outreach & Education | 4 Comments »
Monday, February 2nd, 2009

Now you can explore Mars with version 5 of Google’s 3D exploration software (still called Earth)! HiRISE team members worked with Google to make this possible. Previously, you had to perform a few tricks to get it going, but now it is all built in smoothly. To switch to Mars. select the planet drop-down at the top center.
You can enable footprints for HiRISE, CTX, CRISM, Mars Express’ HRSC and Global Surveyor’s MOC.
By clicking on a HiRISE footprint, you can get a window with a hi-res preview and a link to the observation page on our website.
A nice addition is text from (our fellow Tucsonan) William K. Hartmann’s A Traveler’s Guide To Mars, explaining the geologic provinces on Mars (click on the green ‘hiker’ icons).
You can see screenshots and get more info from the unofficial Google Earth blog and download Windows, Mac or Linux versions from Google’s Earth site.
It looks like there is some broad-scale elevation data. Shift+up or down tilts your view, shift + right or left spins, and page up / page down zooms.
Have fun exploring Mars!
Posted by GuyMac in News & Events, Outreach & Education, Special Events | 10 Comments »
Sunday, January 18th, 2009
Thanks to our webmaster, and Google, HiRISE pages can now be translated from English to French, Spanish, Portuguese, Italian, German or Arabic.
Here is a tip: once you have translated a page, all pages on the HiRISE website that you click through will be translated, too! There will be a link at the top of your browser to return to the original page. You can also hover over a sentence to see it in the original language, English.
Look for the little flag buttons on the right hand side of an observation page, under the link to Facebook.

We hope our international viewers benefit from this added feature.
Posted by Percy in HiRISE, Outreach & Education, Website | 5 Comments »
Thursday, December 18th, 2008
One of our blog readers asked about the wallpapers we post on our website for some of our released images. If you haven’t seen these, they’re linked over on the lower right of pages like this. Many different sizes are available, from 800×600 all the way up to 2560×1600 (for lucky people with ginormous monitors), so you can choose the right size for your screen resolution.
Our masterful web master creates these wallpapers for each of our weekly captioned releases (these are the images we release each week with some commentary written by the science team). He picks out an interesting area from each image and produces custom cutouts in different sizes. We provide these extra files because we think the images are so beautiful, everyone should have them on their desktop.
Because they’re all done by hand, though, we unfortunately don’t have the resources to make these special products for every single image. For example, most of the 1,642 images we released in our big December PDS release don’t have wallpapers. However, you can make your own, and here’s how!
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Tags: caption, Color, IAS viewer, product, projection, release, wallpaper, weekly release
Posted by Kite in Images & Science, Releases, Website | 1 Comment »
Monday, December 8th, 2008
HiRISE is (finally!) on Twitter! (Now that we’re getting a break during Solar Conjunction, we have time to catch up with trends in technology.
)
If you’re not familiar with it, Twitter is kind of like a mini-blog. Posts are limited to 140 characters, which keeps things short & simple. In a way, it’s like updating your “status” in chat or on Facebook. You can use it many different ways – commands work via SMS text messaging, so you can get or make updates with a cell phone or other mobile device; it can hook into instant messaging, chat programs or social networking sites; there are widgets you can download, or simply make & read updates through the website.
To see a great example of how this can work, check out the Phoenix Twitter feed – that was a lot of fun, and also provided timely, award-winning coverage. We don’t aim quite that high, but we hope to give you a heads up about releases, important events, and maybe some random things just for fun.
(Suggestions for tweets? Add them in a comment below!)
So follow HIRISE on Twitter to see what we’re doing now!
Tags: blog, public, twitter, update
Posted by Kite in HiRISE, News & Events, Outreach & Education | No Comments »