Jon Nguyen Tour the solar system from home

As a kid, I was fascinated with all things air and space.

I would watch Nova on PBS.

Our school would show Bill Nye the Science Guy.

When I was in elementary school, my next door neighbor,

he gave me a book for my birthday.

It was an astronomy book,

and I poured over that thing for hours on end,

and it was a combination of all these things

that inspired me to pursue space exploration

as my own personal dream, and part of that dream was,

I always wanted to just fly around the solar system

and visit different planets and visit moons and spacecraft.

Well, a number of years later, I graduated from UCLA

and I found myself at NASA,

working for the jet propulsion laboratory,

and there our team was challenged

to create a 3D visualization of the solar system,

and today I want to show you what we’ve done so far.

Now, the kicker is, everything I’m about to do here

you can do at home, because we built this

for the public for you guys to use.

So what you’re looking at right now is the Earth.

You can see the United States and California

and San Diego, and you can use the mouse

or the keyboard to spin things around.

Now, this isn’t new. Anyone who’s used Google Earth

has seen this before, but one thing we like to say

in our group is, we do the opposite of Google Earth.

Google Earth goes from this view down to your backyard.

We go from this view out to the stars.

So the Earth is cool, but what we really want to show

are the spacecraft,

so I’m going to bring the interface back up,

and now you’re looking at a number of satellites

orbiting the Earth.

These are a number of our science space Earth orbiters.

We haven’t included military satellites and weather satellites

and communication satellites and reconnaissance satellites.

If we did, it would be a complete mess,

because there’s a lot of stuff out there.

And the cool thing is, we actually created 3D models

for a number of these spacecraft, so if you want to visit

any of these, all you need to do is double-click on them.

So I’m going to find the International Space Station,

double-click, and it will take us all the way down to the ISS.

And now you’re riding along with the ISS

where it is right now.

And the other cool thing is, not only can we

move the camera around, we can also control time,

so I can slide this jog dial here

to shuttle time forward, and now

we can see what a sunset on the ISS would look like,

and they get one every 90 minutes. (Laughter)

All right, so what about the rest of it?

Well, I can click on this home button over here,

and that will take us up to the inner solar system,

and now we’re looking at the rest of the solar system.

You can see, there’s Saturn, there’s Jupiter,

and while we’re here, I want to point out something.

It’s actually pretty busy.

Here we have the Mars Science Laboratory

on its way to Mars, just launched last weekend.

Here we have Juno on its cruise to Jupiter, there.

We have Dawn orbiting Vesta,

and we have over here New Horizons

on a straight shot to Pluto.

And I mention this because

there’s this strange public perception that

NASA’s dead, that the space shuttles stopped flying

and all of the sudden there’s no more spacecraft out there.

Well, a lot of what NASA does is robotic exploration,

and we have a lot of spacecraft out there.

Granted, we’re not sending humans up at the moment,

well at least with our own launch vehicles,

but NASA is far from dead,

and one of the reasons why we write a program like this

is so that people realize that there’s so many other things

that we’re doing.

Anyway, while we’re here, again,

if you want to visit anything,

all you need to do is double-click.

So I’m just going to double-click on Vesta,

and here we have Dawn orbiting Vesta,

and this is happening right now.

I’m going to double-click on Uranus, and we can see

Uranus rotating on its side along with its moons.

You can see how it’s tilted at about 89 degrees.

And just being able to visit different places

and go through different times,

we have data from 1950 to 2050.

Granted, we don’t have everything in between,

because some of the data is hard to get.

Just being able to visit places in different times,

you can explore this for hours,

literally hours on end,

but I want to show you one thing in particular,

so I’m going to open up the destination tab,

spacecraft outer planet missions, Voyager 1,

and I’m going to bring up the Titan flyby.

So now we’ve gone back in time.

We’re now riding along with Voyager 1.

The date here is November 11, 1980.

Now, there’s a funny thing going on here.

It doesn’t look like anything’s going on.

It looks like I’ve paused the program.

It’s actually running at real rate right now,

one second per second, and in fact,

Voyager 1 here is flying by Titan at

I think it’s 38,000 miles per hour.

It only looks like nothing’s moving because, well,

Saturn here is 700,000 miles away,

and Titan here is 4,000 to 5,000 miles away.

It’s just the vastness of space makes it look like nothing’s happening.

But to make it more interesting,

I’m going to speed up time, and we can watch

as Voyager 1 flies by Titan,

which is a hazy moon of Saturn.

It actually has a very thick atmosphere.

And I’m going to recenter the camera on Saturn, here.

I’m going to pull out, and I want to show you

Voyager 1 as it flies by Saturn.

There’s a point to be made here.

With a 3D visualization like this,

we can not only just say Voyager 1 flew by Saturn.

There’s a whole story to tell here.

And even better, because it’s an interactive application,

you can tell the story for yourself.

If you want to pause it, you can pause it.

If you want to keep going, if you want to change

the camera angle, you can do that,

and because of that, I can show you

that Voyager 1 doesn’t just fly by Saturn.

It actually flies underneath Saturn.

Now, what happens is, as it flies underneath Saturn,

Saturn grabs it gravitationally and flings it up

and out of the solar system,

so if I just keep letting this go,

you can see Voyager 1 fly up like that.

And, in fact, I’m going to go back to the solar system.

I’m going to go back to today, now,

and I want to show you where Voyager 1 is.

Right there, above, way above the solar system,

way beyond our solar system.

And here’s the thing. Now you know how it got there.

Now you know why, and to me,

that’s the point of this program.

You can manipulate it yourself.

You can fly around yourself and you can learn for yourself.

You know, the theme today is “The World In Your Grasp.”

Well, we’re trying to give you

the solar system in your grasp — (Laughter) —

and we hope once it’s there,

you’ll be able to learn for yourself

what we’ve done out there, and what we’re about to do.

And my personal dream is for kids to take this

and explore and see the wonders out there

and be inspired, as I was as a kid,

to pursue STEM education

and to pursue a dream in space exploration.

Thank you. (Applause)

小时候,我对空气和太空的所有事物都很着迷。

我会在 PBS 上看 Nova。

我们学校会向比尔·奈展示科学人。

当我上小学的时候,我的隔壁邻居,

他给了我一本书作为我的生日礼物。

那是一本天文学书

,我连续数小时倾注于那

东西,所有这些东西的结合

激发了我将太空探索

作为我自己的个人梦想,而这个梦想的一部分是,

我一直想 只需绕太阳系飞行

并访问不同的行星并访问卫星和航天器。

几年后,我从加州大学洛杉矶分校毕业,

在 NASA

工作,为喷气推进实验室工作,在

那里我们的团队面临

着创建太阳系 3D 可视化的挑战

,今天我想向你展示什么 到目前为止,我们已经完成了。

现在,更重要的是,我在这里要做的所有事情

你都可以在家里做,因为我们为公众建造了这个

供你们使用。

所以你现在看到的是地球。

你可以看到美国、加利福尼亚

和圣地亚哥,你可以使用鼠标

或键盘来旋转东西。

现在,这并不新鲜。 任何使用过 Google 地球的人

都曾见过这种情况,但我们喜欢在小组中说的一件事

是,我们做的与 Google 地球相反。

谷歌地球从这个视图到你的后院。

我们从这个观点出发去看星星。

所以地球很酷,但我们真正想展示的

是宇宙飞船,

所以我要恢复界面

,现在你正在查看许多

围绕地球运行的卫星。

这些是我们的一些科学空间地球轨道飞行器。

我们还没有包括军用卫星和气象卫星

以及通信卫星和侦察卫星。

如果我们这样做了,那将是一团糟,

因为那里有很多东西。

很酷的是,我们实际上

为这些航天器创建了 3D 模型,所以如果你想参观其中的

任何一个,你需要做的就是双击它们。

所以我要找到国际空间站,

双击,它会带我们一路下到国际空间站。

现在你正和国际空间站一起骑

在它现在所在的地方。

另一个很酷的是,我们不仅

可以移动相机,还可以控制时间,

所以我可以在这里滑动这个慢速拨盘,

让时间向前穿梭,现在

我们可以看到国际空间站上的日落会是什么样子,

他们每 90 分钟得到一个。 (笑声)

好吧,那么剩下的呢?

好吧,我可以点击这里的主页按钮

,这将带我们进入内部太阳系

,现在我们正在查看太阳系的其余部分。

你可以看到,有土星,有木星

,当我们在这里时,我想指出一些事情。

它实际上很忙。 上

周末刚刚发射的火星科学实验室

正在前往火星的路上。

在这里,我们有朱诺号正在前往木星的巡航,那里。

我们有黎明环绕灶神星

,我们在这里有新视野

号,直射冥王星。

我之所以提到这一点,是因为

公众有一种奇怪的看法,即

NASA 已经死了,航天飞机停止飞行

,突然之间没有更多的航天器了。

嗯,美国宇航局所做的很多事情都是机器人探索

,我们有很多航天器。

诚然,我们目前并没有派人上去

,至少用我们自己的运载火箭,

但 NASA 还远未消亡,

我们编写这样一个程序的原因之一

是让人们意识到有这么多

我们正在做的其他事情。

无论如何,当我们在这里时,再次,

如果你想访问任何东西

,你需要做的就是双击。

所以我只是要双击灶神星

,这里我们有黎明环绕灶神星

,这正在发生。

我要双击天王星,我们可以看到

天王星和它的卫星一起在一边旋转。

您可以看到它是如何倾斜约 89 度的。

只是能够访问不同的地方

并经历不同的时间,

我们有 1950 年到 2050 年的数据。

当然,我们没有介于两者之间

的所有数据,因为有些数据很难获得。

只是能够在不同的时间参观地方,

你可以探索几个小时,

实际上是几个小时,

但我想特别向你展示一件事,

所以我要打开目的地选项卡,

航天器外行星任务, 航海者一号

,我要提到泰坦飞越。

所以现在我们回到了过去。

我们现在和航海者一号一起骑行。

这里的日期是 1980 年 11 月 11 日。

现在,这里发生了一件有趣的事情。

看起来没有任何事情发生。

看来我已经暂停了程序。

它现在实际上正在以实际速度运行,

每秒一秒,事实上,

这里的航海者 1 号正以

我认为每小时 38,000 英里的速度飞过泰坦。

它只是看起来没有任何动静,因为

土星在 700,000 英里之外,

而泰坦在 4,000 到 5,000 英里之外。

只是广阔的空间让它看起来像什么都没有发生。

但为了更有趣,

我要加快时间,我们可以

看到航海者一号飞过

土星的朦胧卫星土卫六。

它实际上有很厚的大气层。

我将在这里重新定位土星上的相机。

我要退出了,我想向你展示

航海者 1 号飞过土星的过程。

这里有一点需要说明。

有了这样的 3D 可视化,

我们不仅可以说航海者 1 号飞过土星。

这里有一个完整的故事要讲。

更好的是,因为它是一个交互式应用程序,

您可以自己讲述故事。

如果你想暂停它,你可以暂停它。

如果你想继续前进,如果你想

改变摄像机的角度,你可以这样做,正

因为如此,我可以告诉

你航海者一号不只是飞过土星。

它实际上在土星下方飞行。

现在,发生的事情是,当它在土星下方飞行时,

土星通过引力抓住它并将其

向上抛离太阳系,

所以如果我继续放手,

你可以看到航海者一号就这样飞起来。

而且,事实上,我要回到太阳系。

我要回到今天,现在

,我想告诉你航海者一号在哪里。

就在那儿,在太阳系之上

,远远超出我们的太阳系。

事情就是这样。 现在你知道它是如何到达那里的了。

现在你知道为什么了,对我来说,

这就是这个项目的意义所在。

你可以自己操纵它。

你可以自己飞,你可以自己学习。

你知道,今天的主题是“你掌握的世界”。

好吧,我们正试图让

你掌握太阳系——(笑声)

——我们希望一旦它出现,

你就能自己

了解我们在那里做了什么,以及我们在做什么 去做。

我个人的梦想是让孩子们接受这个

并探索并看到那里的奇迹

并受到启发,就像我小时候一样

,追求 STEM 教育

并追求太空探索的梦想。

谢谢你。 (掌声)