NASA seeks to answer the unknown.
At SXSW Interactive in Austin, Texas, attendees will find out how
NASA is answering the tough questions such as: Is there life on other
planets? Are we smarter than the dinosaurs? What are astronauts studying
on the International Space Station?
Panels
NASA will lead five presentations and panel sessions during the SXSW
Interactive festival, which are open to SXSW Interactive badged
participants.
Live from Space! Talk with Astronauts in Orbit
Sat, Mar 8; 11:00am, Omni Downtown, Capital Ballroom
http://schedule.sxsw.com/2014/events/event_IAP25456
John Yembrick, NASA's social media manager, will lead a discussion
about how technology has evolved the way the agency connects with the
public. Just a few short years ago, only a select few were able to talk
to astronauts in space. Today, all you need is to be on the Internet. At
SXSW, audience members can ask questions directly to astronauts Mike
Hopkins and Rick Mastracchio from 250 miles away – in space.
"You don’t have to go to the movies to feel connected to human
spaceflight,” Yembrick said. “Every day on social media astronauts on
the International Space Station are sharing their experience with us
down here on Earth. The station is not only an outstanding test bed for
future space exploration, but also at providing us the human perspective
of looking back at our home planet from orbit. Like never before, we
can live vicariously through the eyes of the astronauts.”
That's Hot: Visualizing NASA Climate Science Data
Sat, Mar. 8; 12:30pm, Omni Downtown, Lone Star Room
http://schedule.sxsw.com/2014/events/event_IAP24689
NASA has a fleet of spacecraft studying every aspect of our home
planet with five new missions launching in 2014. This panel will
demonstrate how NASA is using mobile applications, interactive websites,
near real-time visualizations and social media to deliver meaningful
and understandable Earth science data - in some cases just hours after
it's collected. Representatives from JPL on this panel include Michael
Green, manager for public engagement formulation, Doug Ellison,
visualization producer, and Veronica McGregor, media relations manager.
NASA and Kerbal Space Program: The Asteroid Mission In Real and Virtual Worlds
Sat, Mar. 8; 12:30pm, Palmer Events Center, Exhibit Hall 1
http://schedule.sxsw.com/2014/events/event_OE03288
Kerbal Space Program and NASA will share the stage at SXSW Gaming
during SXSW. Their panel will offer the first look at the in-game
mission as well as discuss the process of taking a real mission that is
still highly conceptual and assembling it in Kerbal Space Program. NASA
will be represented at the panel by Jason Townsend, Deputy Social Media
Manager, and Jason Kessler, Grand Challenges Program executive, who
leads NASA's efforts to "find all asteroid threats to human populations
and know what to do about them."
First Signs: Finding Life on Other Planets
Sun, Mar 9, 12:30pm, Omni Downtown, Lone Star Room
http://schedule.sxsw.com/2014/events/event_IAP17180
"First Signs: Finding Life on Other Planets" panel will feature NASA
scientists working on the James Webb Space Telescope. Amber Straughn,
NASA Deputy Project Scientist for JWST Communications and Outreach, and
Natalie Batalha, Research Astrophysicist at NASA Ames Research Center
will join other panelists to discuss the important contributions this
telescope will make in the search for life in the Universe, and set the
stage for how JWST could find the first signs of life on another planet.
Are We Smarter than the Dinosaurs?
Mon, Mar 10; 9:30am, Omni Downtown, Capital Ballroom
http://schedule.sxsw.com/2014/events/event_IAP22997
NASA is using prizes and challenges to help solve world big problems –
like that of a potential asteroid strike. Kessler and colleague
Jennifer Gustetic, Prizes and Challenges Program executive, will talk
about how open innovation can meaningfully engage people in space,
provide funding opportunities to developers, makers & entrepreneurs,
and help us solve problems of global importance at a panel called "Are
We Smarter than the Dinosaurs?" on Monday, March 10.
"66 million years ago, the dinosaurs had a very, very bad day thanks
to a really large asteroid," Gustetic said. "NASA has led the global
effort to find potentially hazardous asteroids, but there's still work
to do and it will take a global effort with innovative solutions through
participatory engagement to complete the survey of smaller, but still
potentially hazardous asteroids.
Exhibits
The general public will be able to talk with scientists and engineers
working on the James Webb Space Telescope and the Hubble Space
Telescope and view a 13-foot-tall model of part of the Webb telescope at
the SXSW Gaming Expo. The Expo takes place Friday, March 7 through
Sunday, March 9 at the Palmer Events Center, 900 Barton Springs Road,
Austin, Texas.
Badged SXSW Interactive participants can check out the "Experience
NASA" exhibit Sunday, March 9 through Wednesday, March 12 at the SXSW
Tradeshow in the Austin Convention Center. This exhibit will feature
some of NASA’s most exciting missions, including our Mars Rovers, the
soon-to-fly Orion space capsule, the Space Launch System, and the
Asteroid Grand Challenge, which seeks public participation. NASA will
also host a Space Meetup on Monday, March 10 at 4 p.m. where
participants can meet fellow space enthusiast – along with NASA staff
from multiple programs, missions, and projects – all at the NASA
exhibit.
Stay Connected
For the latest updates from NASA events at SXSW, follow NASA on
Twitter, Facebook, Google+ and Instagram. You can also join the
conversation using the hashtag #NASASXSW.
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