[accessibleimage] Re: Touch the Sun Two articles

Lisa,

If any one wants to get a copy of Touch the Sun, it is available on
Amazon.com and is quite cheap.  You can find it at
http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0309095603/qid=1134138978/sr=8-9/ref=sr_8_x
s_ap_i9_xgl14/103-8892751-7510204?n=507846&s=books&v=glance

We are really pleased with the book, and hope that lots of people get a
chance to see it.  We executed the tactile images for the book by making
computer-generated engravings, then we took rubber molds from those and used
the rubber molds for thermoforming.  The plastic pages of the book were
pre-printed in four-color silk screen.  More information about how we do
this can be found at http://www.touchgraphics.com/cad.htm. The hardest part
of the process is getting the print image to line up with the tactile during
thermoforming, and for that, Robert Jaquiss of View International Foundation
should take most of the credit!  

Anyway, congratulations to Noreen Grice on another excellent tactile graphic
book on astronomy!

Steve Landau
Touch Graphics, Inc.

-----Original Message-----
From: accessibleimage-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
[mailto:accessibleimage-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx] On Behalf Of Lisa Yayla
Sent: Friday, December 09, 2005 12:23 AM
To: accessibleimage@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: [accessibleimage] Touch the Sun Two articles

Hi,
Two articles about Noreen Grices' new book.
Best,
Lisa

PNN Online
Thursday, December 08, 2005

NASA Helps Visually Impaired Students 'Touch The Sun'

Posted by: laurakujawski on Tuesday, December 6, 2005 
 
A new book entitled "Touch the Sun" allows blind and visually impaired
students to experience images of the sun and solar activity by feeling
transparent raised textures bonded to the pictures.

The National Federation of the Blind (NFB) in Baltimore, MD, will host an
interactive opportunity for pre-selected blind students to explore the sun
through this new and exciting solar book in early December.

The book features engaging images from the Solar and Heliospheric
Observatory (SOHO) and the Transition Region and Coronal Explorer (TRACE)
spacecraft, as well as a close-up of a sunspot from the National Solar
Observatory at Sacramento Peak in the Lincoln National Forest, N.M.

"Invisible magnetic fields rule the violent solar activity that generates
space weather," said Dr. Joseph Gurman, the U.S. project scientist for SOHO
at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, Md. "We are all blind to
magnetic fields, so the visually impaired can be just as successful as the
sighted in solar science," he said. Gurman collaborated with Steele Hill,
the SOHO imaging specialist at Goddard, to select the images and edit the
scientific content.

The book was written by Noreen Grice, author of two other books featuring
textured celestial images for the visually impaired: "Touch the Universe"
and "Touch the Stars." "Touch the Sun" was funded by a partnership between
NASA, the Lockheed Martin Corporation's Advanced Technology Center in Palo
Alto, Calif., and the Stanford Solar Center, Stanford University, Stanford,
Calif.

Raised patterns embossed over the colorful images in "Touch the Sun"
translate shapes, places of solar and magnetic activity and other details of
the sun and space weather, allowing visually impaired people to see with
their fingertips what they cannot see with their eyes. It incorporates
Braille and large-print descriptions for each of the book's 16 photographs,
so it is accessible to readers of all visual abilities.

Students at the Colorado School for the Deaf and Blind in Colorado Springs,
Colo., evaluated each image for clarity and provided suggestions for
improvement.

Approximately 2,500 copies will be printed. The majority will be distributed
free to blind and visually impaired students, with the assistance of the
National Organization of Parents of Blind Children, a division of the NFB.
The remainder will be available for public purchase.

"Our bright yellow star appears unchanging but in fact is an active, violent
place that directly affects our home planet," Grice said. "'Touch the Sun'
is a universally designed book for readers of all visual abilities. You can
explore the sun with embossed color pictures of swirling gas currents, dark
sunspots, curving magnetic fields and explosive eruptions."

To view images from "Touch the Sun" on the Web, visit the NASA Web site.

http://www.nasa.gov/vision/universe/solarsystem/touch_sun.html


Get in Touch With the Sun's Wild Side

Now you can feel sizzling clouds of 
electrified gas and trace the twisted magnetic fields that blasted them from
the 
sun into space. 

The new "Touch the Sun" book allows blind and visually impaired 
students to experience images of the sun and solar activity by feeling 
transparent raised textures bonded to the pictures. On Dec. 2 at the
National 
Federation of the Blind (NFB) in Baltimore, Md., NASA and the NFB will host
an 
interactive opportunity for pre-selected blind students to explore the sun 
through this new and exciting solar book. 

*Image Right:* Cover of the new "Touch the Sun" book, 
available for purchase in Spring 2005. "Touch 
the Universe"
<javascript:openNASAWindow('http://hubblesite.org/newscenter/newsdesk/archiv
e/releases/2002/28/')> and "Touch 
the Stars"
<javascript:openNASAWindow('http://www.nbp.org/ic/nbp/TOUCH.html')> are
available now. Credit: NASA

"Our bright yellow 
star appears unchanging but in fact is an active, violent place that
directly 
affects our home planet," said author Noreen Grice. "'Touch the Sun' is a 
universally designed book for readers of all visual abilities. Explore the
sun 
with embossed color pictures of swirling gas currents, dark sunspots,
curving 
magnetic fields and explosive eruptions." 


"Touch the Sun" features arresting images from the Solar and 
Heliospheric Observatory (SOHO) and the Transition Region and Coronal
Explorer 
(TRACE) spacecraft as well as a close-up of a sunspot from the National
Solar 
Observatory at Sacramento Peak in the Lincoln National Forest, N.M. 


*Image Left:* Callie Hurst tests out 
some of the early versions of the book with Ben Wentworth, a retired science

teacher. Credit: James Bristol, Coloado School for the Deaf and 
Blind

"Invisible magnetic fields rule the violent solar activity 
that generates space weather," said Dr. Joseph Gurman, the U.S. project 
scientist for SOHO at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, Md. "We
are 
all blind to magnetic fields, so the visually impaired can be just as
successful 
as the sighted in solar science." Gurman collaborated with Steele Hill, the
SOHO 
imaging specialist at Goddard, to select the images and edit the scientific 
content. 


*Image Right:* A preview page 
from "Touch the Sun." The embossed lines are meant to illustrate the
fluctuating 
texture of the sun and a prominence rising on the limb. Click for a high 
resolution version or *here
</images/content/105298main_sun-comparison_lg.jpg>* for a page 
demonstrating the sun's size compared to Earth's. Credit: NASA/Joseph Henry 
Press

The book was written by Noreen Grice, author of two other 
books featuring textured celestial images for the visually impaired: "Touch
the 
Universe" and "Touch the Stars." "Touch the Sun" was funded by a partnership

among NASA, the Lockheed Martin Corporation's Advanced Technology Center in
Palo 
Alto, Calif., and the Stanford Solar Center, Stanford University, Stanford, 
Calif. 

Approximately 2,500 copies will be printed. The majority will be 
distributed free of charge to blind and visually impaired students with the 
assistance of the National Organization of Parents of Blind Children, a
division 
of the National Federation of the Blind. The remainder will be made
available to 
the public for purchase. 


*Image Left:* Some of the 
images selected for the "Touch the Sun" book include views from the SOHO and

TRACE spacecraft. Credit: NASA/ESA/LMSAL

Raised patterns embossed 
over the images in "Touch the Sun" translate colors, shapes, and other
intricate 
details of the sun and space weather, allowing visually impaired people to
feel 
what they cannot see. The book incorporates Braille and large-print
descriptions 
for each of the book's 16 photographs, so it is accessible to readers of all

visual abilities. 

Students at the Colorado School for the Deaf and Blind 
in Colorado Springs, Colo., evaluated each image for clarity and provided 
suggestions for improvement. 

Gurman initiated "Touch the Sun" after he 
saw "Touch the Universe" being presented at the June 2002 meeting of the 
American Astronomical Society in Albuquerque, N.M. "I realized solar science
was 
a natural fit for a book like this, and our partners did as well. This was
one 
of those rare projects where there was no resistance to the idea -- everyone
who 
heard about it was enthusiastic." 

"Touch the Sun" is being published by 
the Joseph Henry Press, trade imprint of the National Academies Press
(publisher 
for the National Academy of Sciences). 

"Touch 
the Universe" News Feature
<javascript:openNASAWindow('http://hubblesite.org/newscenter/newsdesk/archiv
e/releases/2002/28/')>
National 
Academies Press
<javascript:openNASAWindow('http://www.nap.edu/catalog/11219.html')>
National 
Braille Press
<javascript:openNASAWindow('http://www.nbp.org/ic/nbp/TOUCH.html')>
SOHO 
site
<javascript:openNASAWindow('http://soho.nascom.nasa.gov/hotshots/2004_12_15'
)>



 






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