NASA Brings Moon, Mars Experience to Florida Air Show

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11.10.05

Bruce Buckingham
Kennedy Space Center, Fla.
Phone: (321) 867-2468 

Kim Newton
Marshall Space Flight Center
Huntsville, Ala.
Phone: (256) 544-0034 

RELEASE: 101-05

NASA BRINGS MOON, MARS EXPERIENCE TO FLORIDA AIR SHOW

The Stuart Air Show in Stuart, Fla., is known for "wowing" audiences 
with the latest high-flying, high-tech aircraft. But when NASA's 
"Vision for Space Exploration Experience" arrives at Witham Field 
Nov. 12, the traveling exhibit is sure to send visitors' imaginations 
soaring out-of-this-world -- to the Moon, Mars and destinations 
beyond. 

The new interactive exhibit is heading to the air show Nov. 12-13 to 
share with attendees the Vision for Space Exploration: completion of 
the International Space Station, returning humans to the Moon and 
traveling to Mars and destinations beyond. The Stuart Air Show is an 
annual event showcasing more than 100 planes and includes in-air 
displays from U.S. Air Force demo teams and solo acts. The 2005 show 
is expected to draw more than 40,000 visitors. 

The Vision for Space Exploration exhibit -- housed in a 53-foot-long 
trailer -- is intended to inspire space enthusiasts as they embark on 
a simulated space journey to the farthest reaches of the solar 
system. From interactive holographic control panels to 3D imagery, 
visitors will "fly" to the moon, Mars and beyond, and discover what 
it might be like to live and work on the surfaces of the moon and 
Mars. 

The NASA exhibit will be open to the public during air show hours 
Saturday and Sunday, Nov. 12-13, from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. The exhibit is 
wheelchair accessible. 

Visitors who enter NASA's Vision for Space Exploration exhibit will 
begin their journey surrounded by stars, and take turns "controlling" 
holographic images of the Moon and Mars -- to explore their surfaces 
and learn about journeys to come. 

"Explorers" then are escorted into a 136-square-foot, 
three-dimensional theater featuring a five-screen presentation about 
the Vision. The dome's interior becomes a seamless 
floor-to-wall-to-ceiling window for a journey to other-worldly 
destinations. Visitors travel virtually through space, experiencing 
environments in other parts of our solar system -- giving them the 
illusion of stepping on the surfaces of Earth, the Moon and Mars. 

NASA experts will be available at the exhibit to answer questions and 
discuss some of the 30,000 technologies now used on Earth as a result 
of NASA's 50 years of space-based research and development. Attendees 
will learn how tomorrow's lifestyles will change as NASA develops 
advancements in power, computer and medical technologies, 
communications, networking and robotics. In addition, visitors will 
learn how other advanced technologies will increase the safety and 
reliability of space transportation systems, while also reducing 
costs. 

For more information, visit: 



http://www.nasa.gov/home

	
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