About Globe4D

Globe4D
Globe4D is an interactive, four-dimensional globe. It’s a projection of the Earth’s surface on a physical sphere. It shows the historical movement of the continents as its main feature, but it is also capable of displaying all kinds of other geographical data such as climate changes, plant growth, radiation, rainfall, forest fires, seasons, airplane routes, and more.


Enhanced Life
Globe4D extends the functionality of traditional globes found in many households and schools by allowing people of all ages and backgrounds to learn in an entertaining way about how a planet changes over time.

Goal
Globe4D is designed to be a simple but highly educational entertaining multi-user device for globe viewing. We want people, especially kids, to learn about the earth, let them realize in a playful and tactile manner how earth changed and still changes over time. On long term (continental drift) as well on short term (e.g.daylight changes).

Innovations
Globe4D’s main innovation is its method of mapping spatio-temporal geographic data on a physical sphere. It is not a flat representation of a changing planet but a real physical globe featuring hands-on interactivity. All kinds of spherical data can be displayed and interacted with as a result of creating our own flexible software engine. The significance of touch combined with a new perspective on showing geographic data makes using Globe4D both entertaining and highly educational.

Vision
Flat screens in classrooms and museums are outdated when it comes to learning about the earth. The earth is a sphere, and so is Globe4D. The earth changes over time, and so does Globe4D. You can play on earth, and you can play with Globe4D. You can learn on earth, and you can learn from Globe4D.

“Don’t put kids behind computers. Put computers behind things!”

Contributors
Nico van Dijk
Hanco Hogenbirk
Danica Mast
Rick Companje
Dirk Jansen

Globe4D started as research project at Leiden University, the Netherlands

Contact
info . (at) . globe4d . (dot) . com

Interaction

The user can interact with the globe in two ways. First: rotation of the sphere itself. Second: turning a ring around the sphere.

By rotating the sphere the projected image rotates along with the input movement. Turning the ring controls time as the 4th dimension of the globe.

In our installation the user experiences a time-shift of more than 750.000.000 years. You can perfectly see the continental drift during this time-travel!

Of course Globe4D limitation boundaries are not fixed to the earth alone. Live weather images and daylight changes can be projected on the globe as well as climate changes, earthquakes and hurricanes.

You can even think of going to the middle of the earth by zooming in on its crust peeling of the earth as if it is an onion.

Of course Globe4D is not limited to the earth alone. The moon, the sun, mars and any other spherical object can be projected as well.

Some technical details

The Globe4D concept consists of three parts: the Hardware, the Software and the Data Model.

The hardware is the physical installation which is build out basic materials. A single video projector, placed on the ceiling, covers the visible part of the sphere. Optical sensors are used for registering the rotation of sphere in all directions and another optical sensor is used for tracking the movement of the outer ring. Having the projector above the sphere also makes it possible to walk around the globe without affecting the projection.

The software application for Globe4D was written in C++ and uses OpenGL and OpenGlut for rendering and controlling the 3D animated movies and handling user interaction.

The Data Model was written in C++ and Processing and provides the textures for the animations on the sphere and the text projected around it. It extracts and caches texture sequences from a movie whereby it interpolates embedded elliptical images to texture maps for a sphere.

Conclusion and future work

The Globe4D software application and Data Model make it possible to project various kinds of educational, scientific or artistic data on a sphere. The combination with the Hardware makes it a direct manipulation device in four dimensions. Globe4D can be used for educational purposes by Museums of Natural History, schools, research institutes and universities.

We encourage you to think of new applications or animations. Ideas and suggestions are very welcome.

Globe4D, the four dimensional direct manipulation device on a physical sphere!

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7 Responses to “About Globe4D”

  1. Sean Stickle Says:

    Will the software that drives this wonderful machine be made available to the public under some open source license? I would absolutely love to build one of these myself for projecting a variety of interesting data.

  2. Maz Lee Says:

    If Globe4D can work on with google earth and its plus-ins,that would be cool enough.

  3. April Wyatt Says:

    Can the software be connected to and updated via the Internet, to show current time and weather? Like having our own weatherman at home!

  4. deny Says:

    It’s so wonderful.
    I glad can read this paper. But i want ask can we use this things like map digital ?
    I things it will be useful

  5. gaurav bhatt Says:

    it is really amazing.after looking globe 4 d .this is the time to think beyond 3d.

  6. Adriaan Says:

    Did you guys borrow this idea from Douglas Coupland’s book Jpod? (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jpod)

  7. Mike Cook Says:

    Monitors, keyboards and mice are all well and good but as humans, we need that tactile, physical interaction. Globe 4D has got to be one of the best convergences of both the physical and the digital I’ve seen in ages.

    Super cool!

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Earth without water

Earth 55 million years ago

Earth with 15% water

Mars and other planets

Earth with clouds and hurricane

Earth and other planets

Earth with 40% water

Earth’s seasons

Globe4D empty booth

globe4d-paleogene-62-million-ago.png
Globe4D showing the Paleogene era, 62 million years ago.

globe4d-family.png

globe4d-kids-2.png
People of all ages learn in an entertaining way about how the earth changes over time.

Movie!
Globe4D video demonstrationWatch the movie

Globe4D-Laval-2001.png