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Ocean Planet: Final Version with Credits
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The Ocean Planet is a traveling exhibition from the Smithsonian Institution which opened in Washington DC on April 22, 1995. A part of the exhibition was a computer flyby of the Pacific Ocean developed in the SVS. This animation represents a stage in the development of that flyby.
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Starting from space, this fly-by approaches the Earth and, then travels underwater, following the ocean floor topography, passing boats, sea life, and submarines in the process, finally resurfaceing above the water and traveling back into space.
Duration: 3.8 minutes
Available formats:
352x240 (29.97 fps)
MPEG-1
30 MB
160x80
PNG
13 KB
80x40
PNG
4 KB
320x238
JPEG
7 KB
720x480 (29.97 fps)
DV
778 MB
640x480 (29.97 fps)
MPEG-4
110 MB
How to play our movies
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Animation Number: | 78 |
Animator: | Dave Pape (SVS) (Lead) |
Completed: | 1995-05-26 |
Scientist: | Gene Feldman (NASA/GSFC) |
Instruments: | GOES
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| Landsat-5/TM |
| NOAA/AVHRR |
| Nimbus-7/CZCS |
Data sets: | NOAA/ETOPO5
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| USGS/DEM |
| Yale Bright Star Catalog |
Data Collected: | Various |
Series: | Ocean Planet |
Video: | SVS1995-0001 * |
Keywords:
SVS
>> Ocean
DLESE
>> Physical geography
DLESE
>> Physical oceanography
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More Information on this topic available at:
http://seawifs.gsfc.nasa.gov/ocean_planet.html
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Please give credit for this item to NASA/Goddard Space Flight Center Scientific Visualization Studio |
*Please note: the SVS does not fulfill requests for copies of the tapes in our library. On some of our animation pages, there is a direct link to a video distribution service from which tapes, handled by the Public Affairs Office (PAO)/Goddard TV, including some of our animations may be ordered. General information on this service can be found here. |
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