NASA WorldWind
NASA WorldWind is an open-source virtual globe. It was first developed by NASA in 2003 for use on personal computers and then further developed in concert with the open source community since 2004. As of 2017, a web-based version of WorldWind is available online. An Android version is also available.
The original version relied on.NET Framework, which ran only on Microsoft Windows. The more recent Java version, WorldWind Java, is cross platform, a software development kit aimed at developers and, unlike the old.NET version, not a standalone virtual globe application in the style of Google Earth. The WorldWind Java version was awarded NASA Software of the Year in November 2009. The program overlays NASA and USGS satellite imagery, aerial photography, topographic maps, Keyhole Markup Language and Collada files.
Overview
Though widely available since 2003, WorldWind was released with the NASA Open Source Agreement license in 2004. The latest Java-based version, was released in December 2016. As of 2015 a web based version of WorldWind is under development and available online. An Android version is also available.The previous.NET-based version was an application with an extensive suite of plugins. Apart from the Earth there are several worlds: Moon, Mars, Venus, Jupiter and SDSS.
Users could interact with the selected planet by rotating it, tilting the view, and zooming in and out. Five million place names, political boundaries, latitude/longitude lines, and other data can be displayed. WorldWind.NET provided the ability to browse maps and geospatial data on the internet using the OGC's WMS servers, import ESRI shapefiles and kml/kmz files. This is an example of how WorldWind allows anyone to deliver their data.
Other features of WorldWind.NET included support for.X models and advanced visual effects such as atmospheric scattering or sun shading.
The resolution inside the US is high enough to clearly discern individual buildings, houses, cars and even the shadows of people. The resolution outside the US is at least 15 meters per pixel.
Microsoft has allowed WorldWind to incorporate Virtual Earth high resolution data for non-commercial use.
WorldWind uses digital elevation model data collected by NASA's Shuttle Radar Topography Mission, National Elevation Dataset and Advanced Spaceborne Thermal Emission and Reflection Radiometer. This means one can view topographic features such as the Grand Canyon or Mount Everest in three dimensions. In addition, WW has bathymetry data which allows users to see ocean features, such as trenches and ridges, in 3D.
Many people using the applications are adding their own data and are making them available through various sources, such as the WorldWind Central or blogs mentioned in the link section below.
All images and movies created with WorldWind using Blue Marble, Landsat, or USGS public domain data can be freely modified, re-distributed, and used on web sites, even for commercial purposes.
Add-ons and plugins
WorldWind can be expanded by using one of many add-ons - small extensions that add new functionality to the program.Possible types of add-ons:
- Point layers: simple XML files displaying placemarks as icons
- Trail layers: paths
- Line features: XML with a list of points visualized as a line or wall
- Polygon features: XML with a list of points visualized as a filled polygon
- Model features: XML used to load 3D textured meshes
- Place names: specific points that are assigned text labels
- Image layers: high resolution imagery for various places in the world
- Scripts: files that control camera movement
WorldWind Java
The original recipe for WorldWind was restricted to Windows, relying on the.NET libraries and DirectX. A new SDK version has been developed in Java with JOGL referred to as WorldWind Java. The latest version was released in December 2016.This new version has an API-centric architecture with functionalities 'off-loaded' to modular components, leaving the API at the core. This makes WorldWind itself a plugin, so that it can be used as interchangeably as possible. This refactoring exercise allows WorldWind to be accessed via a browser as a Java Applet. A preview of the WorldWind Java SDK was released on May 11, 2007 during Sun Microsystem's annual JavaOne conference.
Since WWj is an SDK, there is no single application; instead there are any number of applications using WWj, each with different functionalities, created by government agencies and commercial developers from around the world. These applications include simple virtual globe viewers, satellite tracker, GIS platforms, photo editor, F-16 simulator, mission planning software and many more.
Tutorials
- NASA WorldWind SDK Tutorial: This Tutorial was developed by the Institute for Geoinformatics from the University of Münster, Germany. It contains tutorials from setting up an Eclipse environment with the WorldWind API to building polygons from Linked Open Data geographic datasets. It contains important tips from beginners to advanced developers.
Forks and clones
- WorldWindJS is community maintained fork of the NASA Web WorldWind SDK. This fork provides a release channel for builds based on the latest fixes and features from WebWorldWind's develop branch plus several "cherry-picked" enhancements from the WorldWind community. The WorldWindJS project is available on GitHub and releases are available on NPM
- Geoforge project contains a fork of the NASA WorldWind project. Geoforge provides open source software. It leads in a platform that manages geosciences data and uses WorldWind features to provide a display of geo-localised geosciences objects.
- Dapple is a fork of the NASA WorldWind project, it is an Open Source project created by developers at Geosoft. Dapple is aimed at geoscience professionals, and has features aimed at them, such as easy addition of WMS servers and a simpler UI very similar to Google Earth's.
- SERVIR-VIZ is a customized version of WorldWind developed by IAGT for the SERVIR project.
- WW2D was a cross-platform, free and open-source application based on Java and OpenGL technologies and can be run on Microsoft Windows, Mac OS X, Linux and Solaris on SPARC. WW2D uses images from WorldWind's servers.
- * WW2D Plus One - an update to WW2D providing a 3D view.
- Punt was a fork of the NASA WorldWind project, and was started by two members of the free software community who had made contributions to WorldWind. Punt was based on the code in WorldWind 1.3.2, but its initial release has features not found in WorldWind 1.3.2 or 1.3.3. Currently, Punt is only available for Windows, but long-term goals include a desire to move to a cross-platform solution.
Datasets available
Earth
Animated data layers
- Scientific Visualization Studio
- MODIS
- GLOBE
- NRL Real-Time Weather
Image/terrain datasets
- Blue Marble Next Generation imagery
- Landsat 7 imagery
- * NLT Landsat
- * Geocover 1990 & 2000
- * OnEarth
- * i-cubed
- USGS imagery
- * Digital Ortho s
- * Urban Area Ortho
- * Topographic maps
- Zoomit! imagery
- * LINZ
- * GSWA
- * South Africa
- * US imagery
- SRTM terrain data
Extraterrestrial datasets
Moon
- Clementine
- Hypsometric Map
Mars
- MOC
- MOLA
- THEMIS
- MDIM
Venus
- Magellan Imaging Radar
- Hypsometric Map
Jupiter
- Jupiter
- Callisto
- Europa
- Ganymede
- Io
Sloan Digital Sky Survey
Survey Imagery
- SDSS Server
- WMAP Image Server
Footprint Imagery
- SDSS Footprint
- FIRST Footprint
Specifications
Baseline resolutions
- 500 m
- 15 m
Typical high resolutions
- U.S.
- * USGS Digital Ortho: 1 m
- * USGS Urban Area Ortho: 0.25 m
- * Zoomit!: 0.15 m to 1 m
- New Zealand
- * Zoomit! : 2.5 m
- Western Australia
- * Zoomit! : 250K surface geology mosaic, 250K topographic data, Magnetic Intensity, Bouger Gravity
- South Africa
- * Zoomit!: Spot5 10 m, Robben Island 0.5 m, Johannesburg 2.5 m
Altitude resolution
- U.S.: 30 m
- Global: 90 m
- Oceans: 2 arcminutes and better
Age
- Some USGS aerial images were taken in the early 1990s.
- Landsat 7 images are all taken after 1999.