IDEAS: Immersive Dome Experiences for Accelerating Science
Abstract
Astrophysics lies at the crossroads of big datasets (such as the Large Synoptic Survey Telescope and Gaia), open source software to visualize and interpret high dimensional datasets (such as Glue, WorldWide Telescope, and OpenSpace), and uniquely skilled software engineers who bridge data science and research fields. At the same time, more than 4,000 planetariums across the globe immerse millions of visitors in scientific data. We have identified the potential for critical synergy across data, software, hardware, locations, and content that -- if prioritized over the next decade -- will drive discovery in astronomical research. Planetariums can and should be used for the advancement of scientific research. Current facilities such as the Hayden Planetarium in New York City, Adler Planetarium in Chicago, Morrison Planetarium in San Francisco, the Iziko Planetarium and Digital Dome Research Consortium in Cape Town, and Visualization Center C in Norrkoping are already developing software which ingests catalogs of astronomical and multi-disciplinary data critical for exploration research primarily for the purpose of creating scientific storylines for the general public. We propose a transformative model whereby scientists become the audience and explorers in planetariums, utilizing software for their own investigative purposes. In this manner, research benefits from the authentic and unique experience of data immersion contained in an environment bathed in context and equipped for collaboration. Consequently, in this white paper we argue that over the next decade the research astronomy community should partner with planetariums to create visualization-based research opportunities for the field. Realizing this vision will require new investments in software and human capital.
Cite
@article{arxiv.1907.05383,
title = {IDEAS: Immersive Dome Experiences for Accelerating Science},
author = {Jacqueline K. Faherty and Mark SubbaRao and Ryan Wyatt and Anders Ynnerman and Neil deGrasse Tyson and Aaron Geller and Maria Weber and Philip Rosenfield and Wolfgang Steffen and Gabriel Stoeckle and Daniel Weiskopf and Marcus Magnor and Peter K. G. Williams and Brian Abbott and Lucia Marchetti and Thomas Jarrrett and Jonathan Fay and Joshua Peek and Or Graur and Patrick Durrell and Derek Homeier and Heather Preston and Thomas Müller and Johanna M Vos and David Brown and Paige Giorla Godfrey and Emily Rice and Daniella Bardalez Gagliuffi and Alexander Bock and James Hedberg and Drew Rosen and Carter Emmart},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1907.05383},
year = {2020}
}
Comments
Astro2020 White Paper submission, 10 pages, 2 figures