NASA and New York City Museum Bring Universe Down to Earth

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March 15, 2006

Erica Hupp/Dwayne Brown 
Headquarters, Washington 
(202) 358-1237/1726 

Michael Walker 
American Museum of Natural History, N.Y. 
(212) 769-5766 

RELEASE: 06-093

NASA AND NEW YORK CITY MUSEUM BRING UNIVERSE DOWN TO EARTH

The American Museum of Natural History in New York City, in 
collaboration with NASA, debuts Cosmic Collisions this week. The 
newest planetarium dome show transports audiences through time and 
space to view the evolving universe and witness galactic events that 
changed the course of life on Earth. 

Narrated by actor, director and producer Robert Redford, the 
planetarium show incorporates NASA satellite data, cutting-edge 
astrophysics research and state-of-the-art supercomputing. The show 
features breathtaking life-like animation, images and dramatic 
recreations of interstellar events. NASA scientists were involved in 
the production of the film providing technical and scientific 
expertise. 

"This show will provide audiences perspectives on the challenges of 
exploring the universe beyond our planet, as we move forward with the 
commitment to exploration and discovery in implementing America's 
Vision for Space Exploration," said NASA's Chief of Strategic 
Communications Joe Davis. 

The Vision for Space Exploration is a bold new course into the cosmos, 
a journey that will return the space shuttle safely to flight, 
complete the construction of the International Space Station, take 
humans back to the moon and eventually to Mars and beyond. 

Cosmic Collisions presents a view of the universe different from our 
everyday experience watching the peaceful night sky. Collisions are 
commonplace in space and are understood as a key mechanism in the 
evolution of the universe. They are the inevitable result of gravity 
pulling together objects such as planets, stars, and galaxies, in 
constant motion through space. 

The show recreates encounters usually invisible to humankind. Events 
unfold over incredibly vast expanses, spanning billions of years and 
trillions of miles. Events also occur almost instantaneously on a 
subatomic scale as in the collision of protons in the heart of the 
sun. 

Cosmic Collisions highlights catastrophic planetary impacts and 
merging of massive galaxies. The show also outlines the consequences 
of the sun's magnetic variability and the incessant barrage of small 
ionized particles in the solar wind ricocheting off Earth's magnetic 
field creating other worldly conditions called "space weather". 

Programs in NASA's Heliophysics Division observe the complex phenomena 
associated with space weather by studying and understanding the 
fundamental physical processes of the space environment, from the sun 
to Earth, to other planets, and beyond to the interstellar medium. 
The division also provided funding and scientific coordination for 
the show. 

"Information compiled within this office not only helps us understand 
how our planet's habitability are affected by cosmic events, but also 
provides knowledge essential for future human and robotic 
exploration," said Richard Fisher, director, Heliophysics Division. 

To perform the enormously complex calculations and render the scenes 
of interstellar collisions, the space show's production team relied 
on an array of graphic workstations, using hundreds of processors to 
create the graphic images, and a state-of-the art system to view the 
high-resolution graphic images on the Hayden planetarium dome. 

For a short preview of Cosmic Collisions on the Web, visit: 

www.amnh.org/cosmic 



For information about NASA and agency programs on the Web, visit: 

http://www.nasa.gov/home 

	
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