The Smithsonian and Meta are teaming up to let you experience the moon in VR

Visitors to the Smithsonian Institution will soon be one small step closer to virtually walking on the moon. A new partnership between Meta and the Smithsonian’s Arts and Industries Building on the National Mall will let visitors don a Quest 2 VR headset and experience the 1969 Apollo 11 mission that sent Neil Armstrong and co. to the moon. Participants will first be placed in the Eagle spacecraft, and will then be able to walk on the moon’s surface.  “You can literally walk around and look and see the lunar buggy next to you and look down and see the rocks and look at the horizon,” says Rachel Goslins, director of the Arts and Industries Building. “It has literally never been possible, unless you were an astronaut, to experience the moon this way.” The “Moonwalk” exhibit, which opens May 4, comes as museums around the world are exploring ways to use virtual reality technology to tell stories and engage with visitors, and as the Smithsonian promotes the recently revamped Arts and Industries Building with a renewed focus on exploring the future. While VR technology may be new, Goslins emphasizes the building and the Smithsonian have long played a role in introducing people to science and technology of both Earth and space. “The museum is like the original immersive experience,” she says. [Photo: courtesy of the Smithsonian]The exhibit is part of an ongoing series exploring potential “artifacts of the future.” It relies on more than 7,000 photos taken by NASA astronauts on missions to the moon, stitched together and converted to 3D imagery by humans and AI software through a process called photogrammetry. “There’s just a very large collection of scanned objects that are able to be accessed through our technology,” says Monica Arés, head of education and immersive learning at Meta. Visitors will also be able to hear conversations between astronauts and Mission Control staff as they explore the digital exhibition. “They banter with each other; it just makes it so human,” Goslins says. This won’t be the first time the Arts and Industries Building, first opened as the National Museum in 1881, lets visitors learn about the lunar expeditions of the 1960s and ’70s. Just a few weeks after the Apollo 11 mission in 1969, Goslins says, visitors were able to see a rock retrieved from the lunar surface. [Photo: courtesy of the Smithsonian]“It was this mind-blowing experience for people,” she says. “A little bit later we actually had the Apollo command module and lunar lander in the building.” As museumgoers wait to enter “Moonwalk,” they’ll also be able to use augmented reality technology to explore the historic lunar command module as it sat in the building on display in the 1970s, and can take a virtual selfie in a digitized astronaut helmet.  The Smithsonian and Meta previously worked together on a virtual tour of Venice available online, though “Moonwalk” marks their first in-museum collaborative exhibition.  Arés emphasizes the ability of VR to let people experience immersion in a particular place and time. “It allows you to walk in other people’s shoes,” she says, “just like being able to walk with the astronauts who were able to go up to the moon.”

https://www.fastcompany.com/90744190/smithsonian-and-meta-are-teaming-up-to-let-you-experience-the-moon-in-vr?partner=rss&utm_source=rss&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=rss+fastcompany&utm_content=rss

Vytvorené 3y | 25. 4. 2022, 14:24:21


Ak chcete pridať komentár, prihláste sa

Ostatné príspevky v tejto skupine

‘The /r/overemployed king’: A serial moonlighter was exposed for holding 19 jobs at Silicon Valley startups

A software engineer became X’s main character last week after being outed as a serial moonlighter at multiple Silicon Valley startups.

“PSA: there’s a guy named Soham Parekh (in India) w

8. 7. 2025, 22:20:04 | Fast company - tech
Texas flood recovery efforts face an unexpected obstacle: drones

The flash floods that have devastated Texas are already a difficult crisis to manage. More than 100 people are confirmed dead

8. 7. 2025, 17:40:02 | Fast company - tech
The internet is trying—and failing—to spend Elon Musk’s $342 billion

How would you spend $342 billion?

A number of games called “Spend Elon Musk’s Money” have been popping up online, inviting users to imagine how they’d blow through the

8. 7. 2025, 15:20:07 | Fast company - tech
What happened at Wimbledon? ‘Human error’ blamed for ball-tracking tech mishap

The All England Club, somewhat ironically, is blaming “human error” for a glaring mistake by the electronic

8. 7. 2025, 15:20:04 | Fast company - tech
Elon Musk has ‘fixed’ Grok—to be more like him than ever

As Elon Musk announced plans over the Fourth of July weekend to establish a third political party,

8. 7. 2025, 12:50:09 | Fast company - tech