Solar Equation

© "Solar Equation," 2010Aerostat, 5 HD projectors, 7 computers, custom software14m / 48' balloon"Solar Equation" is a large-scale public art installation that consists of a faithful simulation of the Sun, 100 million times smaller than the real thing. C ; bitforms gallery

Rafael Lozano-Hemmer

Solar Equation , ongoing
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bitforms gallery
Documents
  • Solar Equation
    video/mp4
    1280 × 720
  • Solar Equation
    video/mp4
    1280 × 720
Description
"Solar Equation," 2010
Aerostat, 5 HD projectors, 7 computers, custom software
14m / 48' balloon

"Solar Equation" is a large-scale public art installation that consists of a faithful simulation of the Sun, 100 million times smaller than the real thing. Commissioned by the Light in Winter Festival in Melbourne, the piece features the world's largest spherical balloon, custom-manufactured for the project, which is tethered over Federation Square and animated using five projectors. The solar animation on the balloon is generated by live mathematical equations that simulate the turbulence, flares and sunspots that can be seen on the surface of the Sun. This produces a constantly changing display that never repeats itself, giving viewers a glimpse of the majestic phenomena that are observable at the solar surface and that only relatively recent advances in astronomy have discovered. The project uses the latest SOHO and SDO solar observatory imaging available from NASA, overlaid with live animations derived from Navier-Stokes, reaction diffusion, perlin, particle systems and fractal flame equations.
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