The upcoming exhibit is a new spin on existing software called OnSight, which was the first step in Microsoft's partnership with NASA. It gave scientists the ability to navigate a holographic Mars. "OnSight makes the whole process of analyzing the data feel a lot more natural to me," said Abigail Fraeman, a Curiosity team member at JPL, in a post. "It really gives me the sense that I'm in the field when I put it on. Thinking about Martian geology is a lot more intuitive when I can stand in the scene and walk around the way I would if I were in the field." Now the space agency is opening up that immersive experience for visitors to experience a slice of space.

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