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TOPS IN TOPOGRAPHY AVAILABLE ONLINE
People around the world will have a chance to interact
online with Shuttle Radar Topography Mission (SRTM) experts
from NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL), Pasadena, CA, in
a live mission webcast/webchat scheduled for March 28 from 10
a.m. to noon PST .
"During this third Internet opportunity, the public
will be able to hear firsthand from the scientists,
engineers, technicians and administrators who helped make
this unprecedented mapping mission a success," said SRTM team
member Annie Richardson. Audience participants will be able
to question astronaut Janice Voss, STS-99 mission specialist
and member of the crew that deployed SRTM from the Space
Shuttle Endeavour on February 11.
SRTM used an advanced radar technique to obtain data
that will be used to produce the most precise, near-global
topographic map ever. With nearly flawless operations, SRTM
mapped 99.9 percent of the intended coverage of nearly 80
percent of the Earth's landmass. The area is home to about
95% of the world's population.
The audience will learn about the challenges the crew
faced during the deployment of SRTM. Many of the webcast
panelists were involved in mission operations either at
Kennedy Space Center in Florida or Johnson Space Center in
Texas. Through webcasts, Internet participants can watch live
video, hear the discussions, and interact in real time with
these mission experts.
Also participating is Paul Andres, data system lead from the
Earth Knowledge Acquired by Middle school students (EarthKAM)
project. The EarthKAM payload was used by hundreds of
students around the world to obtain more than 2,700
photographs of Earth from space.
A complete schedule of the SRTM webcast can be found
at http://quest.arc.nasa.gov/ltc/jpl/srtm.html.
The NASA Quest SRTM webcasts also provide
opportunities for educators from all over the world to bring
Earth science content to the classroom through Internet
technology. Other online, interactive Quest projects connect
students with NASA employees and are designed to inspire
young people to pursue careers in technology.
Educators can reach NASA Quest's Learning Technologies
Channel at http://quest.arc.nasa.gov.
Co-producing the live SRTM webcast/webchat in
conjunction with NASA Quest is LiveOnTheNet.com (http://
www.liveonthenet.com), which makes it possible for audiences
worldwide to participate in internet events. Also supporting
this event is the JPL Design Hub, a facility where new
spacecraft are designed on the drawing boards of computer
screens and special wall-mounted, computerized whiteboards.
The Design Hub provides engineers a collaborative design,
common electronic database analysis and manufacturing
processing
environment.
Further information on the Shuttle Radar Topography
Mission is available at http://www.jpl.nasa.gov/srtm/.
JPL manages SRTM for NASA's Office of Earth Science,
Washington, DC. JPL is a division of the California Institute
of Technology in Pasadena.
www.jpl.nasa.gov/srtm/
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