AliveInTheLab
23.04.2013, 04:00
"Fly me to the moon
�Let me play among the stars
�Let me see what spring is like
�On a, Jupiter and Mars"
� Frank Sinatra
I work out of our office on One Market Street in San Francisco. My standup-desk is right across from our Gallery at One Market. One of our newer exhibits is called Powers of Design. It was first featured at the Technology Entertainment & Design (TED) conference last year. Powers of Design depicts the size of everything from the inconceivably small to the mind-blowingly large. I thought I'd cover the exhibit elements, one at a time, over the next few months. I started small and am working my way up.
106 MAGNITUDE
1,000,000 m
1,000 Kilometers
The Moon
3,476 kilometers
From green cheese to little green men, the moon has captivated our
imaginations since humans first looked upon the night sky. With a
diameter of nearly 3,500 kilometers (a quarter the diameter of Earth)
and 1/81 its mass, it�s the brightest object in the sky after the sun. The
moon�s gravitational pull produces our tides, while its own dark depths,
believed by ancient astronomers to be water, are vast pools of lava
called maria�Latin for �seas.�
In 1969, as a captivated world watched, Neil Armstrong took the first
steps on the moon, achieving what President John F. Kennedy called
�the most hazardous and dangerous and greatest adventure on which
man has ever embarked.�
"You often hear that the United States no longer has big goals, the way it did when President Kennedy challenged the country to put a man on the moon. And by big goals, I mean something that costs an enormous amount of money, focuses the entire country on the objective, takes years to accomplish, and delivers more in the way of psychological and technological benefits than it gets from actually accomplishing the goal. Walking on the moon was trivial compared to the emotional and psychological boost it provided, and the technology developed along the way."� Scott Adams
Living more sustainably can be our next rallying cry. Autodesk software helps people imagine, design, and create a better world.
Thanks to Global Content Manager, Matt Tierney, for the images and text that comprise the exhibit element. This is just one of the many exhibits in the gallery at One Market in San Francisco. The gallery is open to the public on Wednesdays from 12�pm to 5�pm, and admission is free. Visit�us.
Previous posts on this topic include:
10-15 Protons and Neutrons
10-14 Atomic Nucleus of a Uranium Atom
10-13 Nada, Zilch, Zero, Zip
10-12 Gamma Rays
10-11 Fluorine Ion
10-10 Wavelength of Hard X-Rays
10-9 Carbon Nanotubes
10-8 Molecular Transport Nano Robot
10-7 HIV Virus
10-6 Red Blood Cells
10-5 Sand
10-4 Microelectromechanical Systems
10-3 Sonata Silicium Watch Components
10-2 Lego
10-1 Prosthetic Fairing
100 Biome Concept Car
101 Ma'erkang Housing Reconstruction
102 Shanghai Tower
103 Bay Bridge
104 Masdar City
105 Palm Islands
Future blog posts will cover:
107 Earth
108 Jupiter
109 The Sun
1010 Distance Light Travels in 34 Seconds
1011 Distance from Jupiter to the Sun
1012 Distance from Pluto to the Sun
1013 Voyager 2
1014 The Solar System
1015 Cat's Eye Nebula
1016 Pillars of Creation
1017 Great Orion Nebula
1018 M15 Globular Cluster
1019 Sagitarius Dwarf Galaxy
1020 Trangulum Galaxy
1021 The Milky Way
1022 IC 1101
1023 Local Group of Galaxies
1024 The Local Supercluster
1025 3C 273
1026 Outer Limit of the Universe
Measurement is alive in the lab.
Go to the original post...