ACS President Views Molecularium as Part of National Chemistry Week
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| Derek Sweeney Kesler, RPI alum and
physical sciences coordinator at the Children’s
Museum, demonstrates principles of chemistry before
the show. |
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| Animated characters from the
Molecularium™ show. |
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| Yvonne Akpalu, Bill Carroll, and
Dick Siegel talk with students during the post-show
activity. |
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Troy, N.Y. — As part of his “Extreme National Chemistry Week
Tour,” the president of the American Chemical Society (ACS),
the world’s largest scientific society, joined local
scientists, educators, and a group of area elementary school
students Oct. 19 to view the Molecularium™ show, Riding
Snowflakes, at the Children’s Museum of Science and
Technology in Troy, N.Y.
The show, which was conceived at Rensselaer Polytechnic
Institute, is a state-of-the-art computer-generated animation
for digital dome theaters, designed to spark the interest of
young children in the atoms and molecules that constitute our
world. Supported by a grant from the National Science
Foundation (NSF), the show’s creators have integrated advanced
scientific simulations into an immersive educational animation
to produce a “magical, musical adventure” to excite children
about science.
ACS president Bill Carroll is crisscrossing the country Oct.
14-23, visiting 15 cities in 10 days to highlight the
importance of chemistry and science education. “National
Chemistry Week is ACS’s annual celebration of chemistry,”
Carroll says. “We celebrate the science and benefits of
chemistry, something that makes modern life possible.”
At the Molecularium event, he was joined by Richard W.
Siegel, Robert W. Hunt Professor of Materials Science and
Engineering and director of the Rensselaer Nanotechnology
Center and its NSF-funded Nanoscale Science and Engineering
Center (NSEC) for Directed Assembly of Nanostructures; and
Robert A. Carreau, interim executive director of the Children’s
Museum of Science and Technology. Also participating were the
coordinators of National Chemistry Week for the Eastern New
York section of the ACS, Yvonne Akpalu, assistant professor of
chemistry and chemical biology at Rensselaer, and Thomasin
Miller, applications development engineer at X-ray Optical
Systems, Inc., in East Greenbush.
Siegel and a team of Rensselaer faculty, along with a
diverse group of artists, educators, and students, have
produced a 20-minute show intended to captivate students in
grades K-3 while exploring the states of matter — solid,
liquid, and gas. The Molecularium show is designed to be
projected in a planetarium theater setting, but instead of
taking people from earth to space, the show takes viewers on an
audio-visual journey through the molecular-scale world.
“Molecularium provides an outstanding new opportunity for
educating people of all ages and introduces a new and exciting
way for them to see and understand the world in which they
live,” Siegel says. “Public science literacy is critical to
making informed decisions regarding our world, and Molecularium
can make a significant positive impact.”
The Molecularium project was conceived and led by Linda
Schadler, professor of materials science and engineering at
Rensselaer, and education and outreach coordinator for
Rensselaer’s NSEC. Schadler, Siegel, and Shekhar Garde,
associate professor of chemical and biological engineering at
Rensselaer, are the executive producers of the Molecularium
show.
Garde led the simulation team that brought scientific
accuracy to the show. Rensselaer faculty and students developed
the scientific content and created software enabling the
simulation and computer rendering of millions of atoms in
motion. Then the accurate simulations were imported into
high-end computer animation programs to be woven around
computer generated characters and incorporated into a storyline
by animators Steve Rein, Blake Holland, and Joshua Minges
The executive producers assembled a team of experts to bring
these scientific ideas to life on screen. The team was led
by director V. Owen Bush, producer Kurt Pryzbilla, and creative
director Chris Harvey. The project team represented a
partnership between Rensselaer, the NSF, the Children’s Museum
of Science and Technology and Nanotoon™, which included
faculty, graduate and undergraduate students, artists, visual
effects engineers, chemical engineers, animators, programmers,
other entertainment professionals, elementary school teachers,
and museum staff.
The Molecularium storyline illustrates that everything is
made of atoms and molecules which bond together to make all of
the materials in the universe and that the mobility and
structure of gases, liquids and solids are distinctly
different. Viewers are taken on a ride in a ship, which travels
from the nanoscale to the galactic scale and back. Viewers
are introduced to characters named Oxy™, Carbón™, Hydro™ and
Hyrdra™ (created by Leona Christie), travel along on a magical,
musical, adventurous exploration of clouds, raindrops, and a
snowflake, and watch the transformation from gases to liquids
to solids.
Molecularium Web
Site
Nanotechnology at Rensselaer
In September 2001, the National Science Foundation
selected Rensselaer as one of the six original sites nationwide
for a new Nanoscale Science and Engineering Center (NSEC). As
part of the U.S. National Nanotechnology Initiative, the
program is housed within the Rensselaer Nanotechnology Center
and forms a partnership between Rensselaer, the University of
Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, and Los Alamos National
Laboratory. The mission of Rensselaer’s Center for Directed
Assembly of Nanostructures is to integrate research, education,
and technology dissemination, and to serve as a national
resource for fundamental knowledge and applications in directed
assembly of nanostructures. The five other original NSECs are
located at Harvard University, Columbia University, Cornell
University, Northwestern University, and Rice University.
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Published
October 19,
2005 |
Contact: Jason Gorss
Phone: (518) 276-6098
E-mail: gorssj@rpi.edu |
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