Digital Earth maps county's decision

NASA program produces virtual, 3-D map for Patrick County, Va., showing cell phone dead zones

NASA's Digital Earth office

When NASA officials visited Patrick County, Va., last year to explain the

space agency's benefits to the state, residents had more down-to-Earth concerns

for them.

"The community said, "If you want to help us, help us with the real-world

problems we face every day in Patrick County,'" said Michael Ruiz, special

assistant to the director of NASA's Earth and Space Science Program Office

at Langley Research Center in Virginia.

Specifically, residents wanted to know if NASA could help them weigh

the benefits of equipping county school buses with cell phones vs. handheld

radios, Ruiz said Wednesday during a Digital Earth Community Meeting in

Harrisburg, Pa.

NASA had two words for the residents: Digital Earth.

Digital Earth is a project, headed at the federal level by NASA, to

convert the massive amounts of geospatial data collected by government agencies,

academia and the private sector into a Web-based, 3-D representation of

the world.

As part of the plan, supporters are using the technology to show local

governments, communities and businesses how the Digital Earth project can

benefit them.

To help Patrick County, NASA drew on satellite imagery and data from

the U.S. Geological Survey, the Environmental Protection Agency and the

Federal Communications Commission, Ruiz said.

The result was a virtual, 3-D map of the region that users could view

on a computer monitor or project onto a wall or screen.

Judy Lacks, the county school superintendent, said the results were

impressive.

Beginning with an aerial view of the region from thousands of feet away,

the image zoomed down and wound through the county's hills and roads like

in a video game.

There were shades of green, yellow and, most importantly, brown. The

brown areas were "dead zones," where cell phones would not work. The virtual

map revealed dead zones snaking throughout the region, including along a

road on which one school is located, Lacks said.

The result is that the school opted for a radio system.

Ruiz said the information supplied to Patrick County also might help

residents in the future, when regional cellular service providers consider

construction of new towers.