I am a visualization scientist.
I basically try to come up with ways of explaining complex science stories through the visuals,
and developing artwork and illustrations that actually can help explain the science story
to people.
For decades, popular culture and shows like Star Trek inspired a generation of scientists
by envisioning what space might look like.
But wait, what does space actually look like?
Heart nebulas, celestial collisions, a bird's eye view of the Milky Way, astronomers are
charting the outer reaches of the cosmos and bringing back jaw dropping images from telescopes
like Hubble and its infrared cousin, Spitzer.
If you look down at the bottom of that Milky Way image, you'll see these two words: artist
concept.
This sweeping image of the Orion Nebula, actually looks like this.
And the Trappist-1 star system, the latest discovery of seven potentially habitable exoplanets
that made national headlines is really only a box of grey and white pixels.
You see, space art is part of NASA and it has been since before we went to the moon.
You may remember our host Amy explored this in a previous episode.
It inspired us to track down the scientist behind some of NASA's most fascinating images.
Most space imagery begin with data - very, very complex data.
And transforming these numbers and graphs into an image that captures the public's
imagination requires a delicate balance between science and art.
And that is where Robert comes in.
As an astronomer and an artist, Robert isn't editing images so much as he's making an
artistic hypothesis grounded in facts, so we can visualize what's really happening
up there.
And for objects we haven't even seen yet, like Trappist-1, the artist rendition is a
meticulous process.
Once a result shows up, the first thing I'll do is get a copy of the paper and look over
it.
I just want to understand what is actually being presented as purely science.
Then usually the next step is to contact the scientists involved in the research directly,
and discuss with them how we might go about illustrating their results.
The first day that I saw the data plot of the light curve from the Trappist 1 Star,
my jaw dropped, it was just a forest of deeps dips in the light curve, and we knew there
was a whole flurry of activity.
This data doesn't look like much to the untrained eye, but the depth of the dip reveals
the size of the planet.
And by studying tiny blips of light as the planets pass the star, otherwise known as
the transit method, astronomers can tell that the exoplanets orbit close to its star.
All of this information is critical so Robert can paint the right picture.
You can actually figure out how big the planet is, what its surface temperature would be,
because of that proximity.This is a really tight close-in solar system, so that became
an exciting angle that we wanted to take into the graphics as well.
This is nothing like our own solar system.
To tell a big story like Trappist-1, Robert takes the scientific limitations seriously,
because the wrong color could be very misleading.
Rendering an exo-planet with a bright green continents, would be crossing a line for us.
We don't want to say, hey we found life on this planet and showing green really would
communicate that.
It's enough to show some evidence of water.
A lot of times, we've made special efforts to make the water not look super appealing,
not like this tropical deep blue appearance.
You would think that complete accuracy would be the goal when doing astronomical illustrations,
but that isn't always the case.
The primary goal is communication and understanding.
Communicating space discoveries with art has a long and storied history.
One of the fathers of modern space art was the famed Chesley Bonestell, a designer and
illustrator.
In the 1950s, he created an image of Saturn's moon Titan before Neil Armstrong took his
first steps on the lunar surface.
Carl Sagan once famously said of Chesley, " I didn't know what other worlds looked
like until I saw Bonestell's paintings."
His work was so widely acclaimed that his illustrations accompanied articles written
by German rocket scientist Wernher von Braun, which ultimately inspired the American space
program.
Disney: Many of the things that seem impossible now will become realities tomorrow.
Having a visual response to technical triumphs was something NASA latched onto early on.
For over 50 years, NASA worked closely with artists and creative leaders, like Walt Disney
and Norman Rockwell, to help shape the stories of spaceflight.
It's the same legacy today, just with more advanced scientific understanding and better
tools to imagine what far off worlds might look like if we could visit them.
We want to take a lot of care to make sure that we don't oversell parts of the story
that isn't actually part of the story.
There are people who just look and think, oh NASA's photographed a planet and they
don't understand that actually that was a piece of art.
On the other hand, if we don't do that, and don't put a piece of compelling artwork,
then people may never even look at the story anyway.
We're putting as much science as we can, of what we know today, and I like to think
that in 50 years when people come back and look at the various pictures of exoplanets
after maybe we actually finally know what they look like, they might wink and smile
to each other, oh that's so funny, they thought there was water on that one -- But
also appreciate this is a historical record of how our understanding of these planets
has changed over time.
Turns out, 50 years later was an overestimate.
So much of what we thought we knew about Trappist-1 just changed.
Which means Robert had to get back to the drawing board and quickly re-do the artwork
for these exoplanets.
Robert described the changes during a Facebook live event, and for him, density was a game
changer.
For astronomers we literally know of thousands of exoplanets but these are the only seven
that we have the precise measurements of the mass, and from that the density.
And density for astronomers is incredibly important because that's the first step
to deciding what they're actually made of.
Knowing the densities changed our understanding of what the Trappist-1 planets looked like.
For instance, back in 2017, scientists thought planet d was rocky.
But turns out, it has the lowest density of the seven, and it's actually a water world.
And for planet e, Robert and his team thought it was a watery planet, but it's actually
super rocky and has the same density as Earth!
Meaning, Planet e is the most earth-like planet we know yet.
We're a long way away from sending a spacecraft to Trappist-1, without warp drive of course.
So for now, the artwork will continue to stand as our best guess.
For more science documentaries, check out this one right here.
Don't forget to subscribe and keep coming back to Seeker for more videos.
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