The WorldWide Telescope computer program, released to researchers and the public as a free resource in 2008 by Microsoft Research, has changed the way the ever-growing Universe of online astronomical data is viewed and understood. The WWT program can be thought of as a scriptable, interactive, richly visual browser of the multi-wavelength Sky as we see it from Earth, and of the Universe as we would travel within it. In its web API format, WWT is being used as a service to display professional research data. In its desktop format, WWT works in concert (thanks to SAMP and other IVOA standards) with more traditional research applications such as ds9, Aladin and TOPCAT. The WWT Ambassadors Program (founded in 2009) recruits and trains astrophys...
International audienceSince its inception in the early 2000's, the Virtual Observatory (VO), develop...
Since the Telescopes in Education (TIE) project began in 1993 schools have had access, via telephone...
Over the past decade, the quality and sophistication of optical telescopes commercially available ha...
The WorldWide Telescope computer program, released to researchers and the public as a free resource ...
The WorldWide Telescope is a Universe Information System that can display and access nearly all astr...
In our presentation, we demonstrated some key features of the WorldWide Telescope (WWT). Here we des...
The WorldWide Telescope (WWT) is a visualization software environment that "enables your co...
WorldWide Telescope is a Web application that brings together imagery from the best ground- and spac...
New, visually rich, astronomical software environments coupled with large web-accessible data sets h...
Using WorldWide Telescope (WWT), the California Academy of Sciences used tour presentations created ...
Since the early 1990s there has been a proliferation of astronomy courses offered over the Internet....
Computers and the Internet have created a revolution in the way astronomy can be communicated to the...
Earth Space Science can be a difficult concept for students to grasp because it is a topic they can’...
Remote telescopes are currently being used in many formal and informal educational settings, from mu...
A web site called Teach Astronomy (http://www.teachastronomy.com) has been created to serve astronom...
International audienceSince its inception in the early 2000's, the Virtual Observatory (VO), develop...
Since the Telescopes in Education (TIE) project began in 1993 schools have had access, via telephone...
Over the past decade, the quality and sophistication of optical telescopes commercially available ha...
The WorldWide Telescope computer program, released to researchers and the public as a free resource ...
The WorldWide Telescope is a Universe Information System that can display and access nearly all astr...
In our presentation, we demonstrated some key features of the WorldWide Telescope (WWT). Here we des...
The WorldWide Telescope (WWT) is a visualization software environment that "enables your co...
WorldWide Telescope is a Web application that brings together imagery from the best ground- and spac...
New, visually rich, astronomical software environments coupled with large web-accessible data sets h...
Using WorldWide Telescope (WWT), the California Academy of Sciences used tour presentations created ...
Since the early 1990s there has been a proliferation of astronomy courses offered over the Internet....
Computers and the Internet have created a revolution in the way astronomy can be communicated to the...
Earth Space Science can be a difficult concept for students to grasp because it is a topic they can’...
Remote telescopes are currently being used in many formal and informal educational settings, from mu...
A web site called Teach Astronomy (http://www.teachastronomy.com) has been created to serve astronom...
International audienceSince its inception in the early 2000's, the Virtual Observatory (VO), develop...
Since the Telescopes in Education (TIE) project began in 1993 schools have had access, via telephone...
Over the past decade, the quality and sophistication of optical telescopes commercially available ha...