Press Release

Interactive Web Site “Big Signal” Allows Public To Explore Antarctica Through a Robot’s Senses

By SpaceRef Editor
January 27, 2000
Filed under

Contact: Meg Siegel, msiegel@andrew.cmu.edu, 412-268-5765


Interactive Web Site “Big Signal” Allows Public To Explore Antarctica Through a Robot’s Senses

PITTSBURGH — Big Signal (www.bigsignal.net), an interactive Web site and interface for remote experience
that features the daily activities of Nomad, a robot that has been searching for meteorites in Antarctica
since Jan. 17, is now available to the public.

The Web site and interface were also deployed at the Carnegie Museum of Natural History, where it will be
available to users at a Macintosh computer cluster for the next month. It will also be used by teachers in
classrooms at Pittsburgh’s Arsenal Middle School, Greenfield Elementary School, Columbus Middle School, as
well as suburban locations including Peters Township Middle School, Keystone Oaks High School and Quaker
Valley Middle School.

Big Signal, a two-year project directed by Peter Coppin, a research fellow in the STUDIO for Creative Inquiry
in Carnegie Mellon’s College of Fine Arts, gives users the experience of exploring a remote location through
Nomad’s sensors, including a 360-degree panoramic camera and other sensors that allow students to
engage in remote geology. Big Signal receives information from Nomad daily, making the robot’s expedition
easily accessible to users.

Nomad, a planetary rover prototype, is funded by NASA and was created at Carnegie Mellon’s Robotics
Institute. The principal researcher on the Nomad project is William L. “Red” Whittaker and the project
manager is Dimitrios Apostolopoulos.

“Big Signal extends the senses of ordinary people to a faraway place and lets users engage in a real remote
experience” said Coppin. “The goal of Big Signal is to place students in a real scientific setting by giving them
access to the same data that a scientist would access.”

NASA recently gave Coppin and colleagues at the Robotics Institute a three-year $500,000 grant to develop
“EventScope,” an enhanced system based on Big Signal. EventScope will allow its users to feel as if they are
conducting their own scientific explorations when NASA sends rovers to other planets. Pittsburgh-based
Three-Rivers Connect and the Heinz Endowments are providing more than $70,000 in matching funds for
EventScope.

The Big Signal project has received more than $100,000 from foundation sources, including the Heinz
Endowments, Grable Foundation and the Henry Clay Frick Fund of the Buhl Foundation. Engineers from
Carnegie Mellon’s Robotics Institute, Carnegie Institute of Technology and The Center for Innovation in
Learning have contributed to the project. William Cassidy, professor of geology and planetary science at the
University of Pittsburgh, and Kurt Schwehr of NASA’s Ames Research Center, have also contributed to Big
Signal. Web hosting has been provided by Electronic Information Network, a collaborative project of the
Allegheny County Library Association (ACLA), Carnegie Library of Pittsburgh and the Commission on the
Future of Libraries in Allegheny County.

Experience Nomad’s search for meteorites at
www.ri.cmu.edu/~meteorobot2000

To join Nomad’s search for meteorites in Antarctica, visit
www.bigsignal.net

SpaceRef staff editor.