School district gets dialed in
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Marisa O’Neil
Newport-Mesa students are getting a chance to see a marriage between
the latest technology and some of the most ancient.
Beginning Monday, a webcam will broadcast live images from a
special sundial atop the Newport-Mesa Unified School District
offices. The dial joins others worldwide as part of the EarthDial
project, inspired by the MarsDial -- currently having come technical
difficulties -- on the Spirit rover.
“There was one on Mars before that green guy stepped on it,” joked
board member and sundial enthusiast Tom Egan.
Even if rogue Martians got a hold of the MarsDial, they’d learn a
little about their closest neighbor. The three-inch square dial,
which sits atop one of Spirit’s solar panels, says “Mars” in 17
languages, has colored corners for calibrating its cameras and
explains Spirit’s quest.
Like its EarthDial counterparts, it displays the motto “Two Worlds
One Sun.”
“With this [website], children can compare times between the two
worlds and access dials all over the world,” said Newport-Mesa
science and math coordinator Marcia Encinas.
Encinas drew on her mathematics knowledge to build the dial, on a
roughly 32-inch square piece of plywood. Plans for the EarthDial,
which she got from the Planetary Society, were 24 pages long and
required careful calculations and calibrations to make it work in its
specific location on the district building’s roof.
The science and math involved make it fit perfectly into school
science lessons, particularly the third-grade curriculum, Encinas
said.
“This is a great way of getting students excited about math,” Egan
said.
The EarthDial Project, started by the Planetary Society and
scientist Bill Nye of the television show “Bill Nye the Science Guy,”
includes sundials in eight states and eight countries, Encinas said.
Newport-Mesa’s is one of only two she knows of in California.
Encinas helped set up the sundial Friday. At 11:07 a.m., a shadow
read just past the line marked 11 -- right on time. The webcam
trained on the dial will update the time every 10 minutes on the
district website, which will also include links to the other
worldwide cameras.
If the Spirit starts broadcasting again, they will have a link to
the MarsDial, too.
“Being an engineer, I care about efficiency and optimizing
things,” Egan said. “Because we have the infrastructure in place, it
was easy to put this together.”
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