Walk on Mars with Buzz Aldrin

NASA, Microsoft team up to take people on a virtual guided tour of the Red Planet

April 01, 2016 12:09 am | Updated 12:09 am IST - Washington:

A Microsoft employee demonstrates HoloLens during the Microsoft Build 2016 Developers Conference in San Francisco, California on Wednesday.

A Microsoft employee demonstrates HoloLens during the Microsoft Build 2016 Developers Conference in San Francisco, California on Wednesday.

NASA and technology giant Microsoft have teamed up to create ‘Destination: Mars’, a guided tour of Mars using the HoloLens headset technology that helped scientists plan the Curiosity rover’s activities on the Red Planet.

The technology will offer people a virtual tour of an area of Mars with astronaut Buzz Aldrin in an interactive exhibit using the Microsoft HoloLens mixed reality headset.

“Mixed reality” means virtual elements are merged with the user’s actual environment, creating a world in which real and virtual objects can interact.

The ‘Destination: Mars’ exhibit will open at NASA’s Kennedy Space Center’s visitor complex in Florida, the U.S. space agency said in a statement.

Guests will “visit” several sites on Mars, reconstructed using real images from NASA’s Curiosity Mars Rover, which has been exploring the Red Planet since August 2012.

Aldrin, an Apollo 11 astronaut who walked on the moon in 1969, will serve as the “holographic tour guide” on the journey.

Curiosity Mars rover driver Erisa Hines of the Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) will also appear holographically, leading participants to places on Mars where scientists have made exciting discoveries and explaining what has been learnt about the planet.

“This experience lets the public explore Mars in an entirely new way. To walk through the exact landscape that Curiosity is roving across puts its achievements and discoveries into a beautiful context,” said Doug Ellison, visualisation producer at JPL.

‘Destination: Mars’ is an adaptation of OnSight, a Mars rover mission operations tool co-developed by Microsoft and JPL.

A pilot group of scientists uses OnSight in their work supporting the Curiosity Mars rover’s operations.

“While freely exploring the terrain, participants learn about processes that have shaped this alien world,” Jeff Norris, project manager for OnSight and ‘Destination: Mars’ said.

Abigail Fraeman, a Curiosity science team member at JPL, uses OnSight to make recommendations on where the rover should go and which features it has to study.

Recently, OnSight helped her identify the transition point between two Martian rock formations that they would like to study in further detail.

By utilising the same technologies and datasets as OnSight, ‘Destination: Mars’ offers participants a glimpse of Mars as seen by mission scientists. “By connecting astronauts to experts on the ground, mixed reality could be transformational for scientific and engineering efforts in space,” Mr. Norris said. NASA is preparing to send humans to Mars in the 2030s.

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