Treffer: Real-Time Lunar Prospector Data Visualization Using Web-Based Java

Title:
Real-Time Lunar Prospector Data Visualization Using Web-Based Java
Publisher Information:
United States: NASA Center for Aerospace Information (CASI), 1998.
Publication Year:
1998
Document Type:
Report Report
Language:
English
Notes:
NAS2-14303

RTOP 519-40-72
Accession Number:
edsnas.20030007843
Database:
NASA Technical Reports

Weitere Informationen

The Lunar Prospector was co-developed by NASA Ames Research Center and Lockheed Martin, and was launched on January 6th, 1998. Its mission is to search for water ice and various elements in the Moon's surface, map its magnetic and gravity fields, and detect volcanic activity. For the first time, the World Wide Web is being used to graphically display near-real-time data from a planetary exploration mission to the global public. Science data from the craft's instruments, as well as engineering data for the spacecraft subsystems, are continuously displayed in time-varying XY plots. The craft's current location is displayed relative to the whole Moon, and as an off-craft observer would see in the reference frame of the craft, with the lunar terrain scrolling underneath. These features are implemented as Java applets. Analyzed data (element and mass distribution) is presented as 3D lunar maps using VRML and Javascript. During the development phase, implementations of the Java Virtual Machine were just beginning to mature enough to adequately accommodate our target featureset; incomplete and varying implementations were the biggest bottleneck to our ideal of ubiquitous browser access. Bottlenecks notwithstanding, the reaction from the Internet community was overwhelmingly enthusiastic.