Detailed Globes Enhance Education and Recreation
Consumer, Home, and Recreation
Originating Technology/NASA Contribution
Earth from space—swirling wisps of white against a backdrop
of deep azure, punctuated with brown and green swatches
of land, all etched on one orb surrounded by black
space, floating, seemingly isolated, but teeming with
humanity and other forms of life. It is an iconic image,
first captured November 10, 1967, by the Applications
Technology Satellite (ATS)-3, an unmanned craft conducting
payload experiments and examining the space environment.
Since then, astronauts and spacecraft have sent back
hundreds of pictures of Earth, and each one has had
the same breathtaking effect.
Seeing our home planet from space is one of those self-reflective
experiences, like seeing yourself in a picture, or hearing
your voice on tape. It tells you something about yourself
from outside of yourself. It is an experience that changes
your understanding of the world and your place in it.
This phenomenon is best illustrated by the words of space
travelers who, upon reaching orbit, have gazed back at
Earth and felt the profound impact of viewing the planet
in its entirety.
Frank Borman, Apollo 8 commander, said, “The view of
the Earth from the Moon fascinated me—a small disk, 240,000
miles away....Raging nationalistic interests, famines,
wars, pestilence don’t show from that distance.”
Another veteran of the Apollo 8 mission, William Anders,
had this to say: “We came all this way to explore the
Moon, and the most important thing is that we discovered
the Earth.”
Neil Armstrong, the first person to step foot on the
Moon, described the feeling of perspective he experienced
when staring out at the Earth from the spacecraft window:
“It suddenly struck me that that tiny pea, pretty and
blue, was the Earth. I put up my thumb and shut one eye,
and my thumb blotted out the planet Earth. I didn’t feel
like a giant. I felt very, very small.”
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This
16-foot-diameter, pedestal-mounted, rotating globe
was featured at the 2006 Wirefly X-Prize Cup in
Las Cruces, New Mexico. This exposition of personal
space flight is a “celebration of forward-looking
technology, space exploration, and education,”
attracting thousands of people every October. |
Alan Shepard, commander of the Apollo 14 mission, the
eighth manned mission to the Moon, said of the experience
of seeing the home planet in its entirety, “If somebody
had said before the flight, ‘Are you going to get carried
away looking at the Earth from the Moon?’ I would have
said, ‘No, no way.’ But yet when I first looked back
at the Earth, standing on the Moon, I cried.”
Apollo 15 astronaut, James Irwin, said of the experience,
“As we got further and further away, it [the
Earth] diminished in size. Finally it shrank to the size
of a marble, the most beautiful you can imagine. That
beautiful, warm, living object looked so fragile, so
delicate, that if you touched it with a finger it would
crumble and fall apart. Seeing this has to change a man.”
Astronaut Alfred Worden, another of the original Apollo
crew, and pilot of the Apollo 15 mission, said of his
experience, “Now I know why I’m here. Not for a closer
look at the Moon, but to look back at our home, the Earth.”
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This
6-foot-diameter rotating Orbis globe is installed
in the Children’s Wing Atrium of Northland Church
in Longwood, Florida. |
Years later, space shuttle astronauts are still finding
the view of Earth from space a humbling and profound
experience. Don Lind, astronaut aboard the STS-51B mission
said, “Think about the picture of the Earth coming up
over the horizon of the Moon, which I call the picture
of the century. Every crew that went to the Moon took
that same picture. It is probably as moving as anything
in reorienting people’s idea to the whole world concept.”
The experience was perhaps best illustrated, however,
by Sultan bin Salman bin Abdulaziz Al Saud, a Saudi Arabian
payload specialist aboard STS-51G, a space shuttle mission
comprised of American, French, and Saudi astronauts,
when he said, “The first day or so, we all pointed to
our countries. The third or fourth day, we were pointing
to our continents. By the fifth day, we were aware of
only one Earth.”
Partnership
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This
un-retouched photograph of a 4-foot-diameter Orbis
globe features the world’s cities fluorescing under
black ultraviolet light. It was printed on special
blackout digital fabric with the city lights added
using ultraviolet-sensitive fluorescent paint. |
In 1985, inspired by the pictures he had seen of the
Earth from space, Eric J. Morris founded a company devoted
to designing and producing photorealistic replicas of
our planet. The company, Orbis
World Globes, is located
in Eastsound, Washington, and creates inflatable globes
in many sizes that depict Earth as it is seen from space,
complete with atmospheric cloud cover.
Utilizing available technology of the mid-1980s, the
original EarthBall design was derived from an artist’s
compilation of NASA photographs and National Oceanic
and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) weather satellite
faxes. Over the following 2 decades, as 3-D imaging software,
more powerful computers, and superwide inkjet printers
became readily available, Orbis employed these evolving
capabilities to develop larger and more accurate world
globes. Applying proprietary cartographic software to
transform flat-map imagery into multiple gores (2-D tapered
sections) for creating spherical globes, Orbis now designs
and produces the most visually authentic replicas of
Earth ever created.
NASA took notice of Orbis globes and employed a
16-inch-diameter EarthBall for an educational film it
made aboard the STS-45 shuttle mission. “The Atmosphere
Below,” shot during the 9-day mission aboard Atlantis
in 1992, features astronauts using the EarthBall to explain
how scientists use the unique vantage point of space
to study the Earth’s atmosphere.
Orbis later collaborated with NASA to create two giant
world globes for display at the 2002 Olympic Winter Games
in Salt Lake City. Creating the two
16-foot-diameter Earth globes with NASA involved updating
the lower-resolution imagery the company had been using
with more detailed, recent satellite imagery. This imagery
was taken by NASA’s Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer
satellite, combined with observations of Antarctica made
by NOAA’s Advanced Very High Resolution Radiometer sensor.
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Eric
J. Morris, founder and chief cartographer of Orbis
World Globes with a 4-foot-diameter cloud-free
globe with the imprinted logo of the Instituto
Nacional De Technica Aerospacial (National Institute
of Aerospace Technology)
in Spain. |
Though the cloud cover has been slightly reduced
in order for most of the landforms to be visible, Orbis
globes are otherwise meteorologically accurate. In the
Northern Hemisphere, it is fall, and it is spring in
the Southern Hemisphere.
The satellite image now printed on all Orbis globes displays
1-kilometer resolution, which means that each pixel in
the digital image represents 1 square kilometer of the
planet’s surface. It is 21,600 by 43,200 pixels in size.
According to Orbis, while specific portions of the Earth
have been imaged with higher detail, as of 2002, the
satellite image it uses was the most detailed composite
image of the entire world in existence.
NASA’s new Blue Marble: Next Generation satellite imagery
now provides even higher 500-meter resolution, which
Orbis is planning to utilize for giant (30-foot plus)
diameter world globes.
Orbis also developed the exclusive NightGlow Cities feature,
enabling EarthBalls to display the world’s cities as
the globes revolve from daylight into night. Using light
emissions data from U.S. Department of Defense satellites,
city lights are identified with photoluminescent ink,
fluorescing brightly under black ultraviolet light, adding
a new dimension of authenticity to these world replicas.
Product Outcome
Orbis inflatable globes are available in sizes from 1
to 100 feet in diameter, with the most common being the
standard 16-inch and 1-meter diameter EarthBalls. These
smaller globes are ideal for educational purposes and
have been used everywhere from preschools to universities.
They come with a 20-page book of facts, games, and suggested
activities, including a game of indoor classroom volleyball.
They have been sold in thousands of gift shops, toy stores,
museum shops, and specialty stores.
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This
10-foot-diameter Orbis globe is being carried in
a peace march in Seattle, Washington, in March
2005. Orbis globes have been a magnet for spectators
and cameras in numerous parades, performances,
and rallies around the world. (The gold building
in the background is the Experience Music Project
designed by renowned architect Frank Gehry.) |
Over 100 Orbis world globes from 2 to 20 feet in diameter
have been custom-built for a variety of display purposes.
They have been used as temporary exhibits at numerous
events, such as conferences, trade shows, festivals,
concerts, and parades. For these types of purposes, the
company maintains a fleet of rental globes ranging from
3 to 16 feet in diameter. Globes of various sizes have
been exhibited at numerous events worldwide. Last year,
a 16-foot-diameter Orbis globe was exhibited at the United
Nations’ World Urban Forum, in Vancouver, Canada; the
Space 2006 conference, in San Jose, California; and the
X-Prize Cup Personal Spaceflight Exposition, in Las Cruces,
New Mexico.
Giant Orbis globes have been put on permanent display
at schools, churches, museums, libraries, and a variety
of other locations. Orbis recently installed a 10-foot-
diameter, internally illuminated, rotating globe in the
education center at Washington’s Fairchild Air Force
Base; an 8-foot-diameter rotating world globe at the
entrance to the new Evolving Planet exhibit in Chicago’s
Field Museum; and another 8-foot-diameter rotating world
globe with NightGlow Cities in the new Ripley’s Believe
It or Not! museum in New York City’s Times Square.
Orbis globes can be mounted on floor pedestals, suspended
overhead, filled with helium and tethered in the air,
or even deployed as remote-controlled flying “EarthBlimps.”
Small electric motors enable the globes to slowly rotate
on their axes, as does the real Earth. Internal illumination,
custom graphics, and many other options are also available.
Twenty-two years ago, Eric J. Morris mused, “If only
others could see Earth as the astronauts observe it,
perhaps they would be similarly inspired.” Considering
the success of Orbis World Globes, people of all ages
are being inspired everyday to appreciate our wondrous
planet, Earth.
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