Imagine what life is like for Earth-gazing satellites, which study the planet from above. They gather data on everything from the moisture of our soil to the intensity of mighty hurricanes.

Day after day they orbit the planet, watching, recording and transmitting.

These spacecraft lead a lonely, desolate life, with one major perk: the gorgeous view. NASA, a composer and an architect are trying to bring the Earth-orbiting satellite's experience down to the planet's surface with an art installation in New York City this weekend as part of the World Science Festival.

See also: 55 Astonishing Images of Earth From Space

The shell-shaped piece of art they created — made out of aluminum and called the NASA Orbit Pavilion — is designed to be acoustically ideal for groups of kids and adults standing in the middle of it for a five-minute sound show. The show is engineered to take listeners on a journey with the 20 NASA satellites studying Earth today.

These kinds of art and education pieces provide an important source of inspiration for people who may not know much about NASA otherwise, Ellen Stofan, NASA's chief scientist, said.

"Apollo inspired a whole generation of kids to go into engineering, math, science," Stofan told Mashable in an interview at the exhibit. "They didn't end up all working for NASA, but I think NASA plays a really important inspirational role in getting kids to go into STEM subjects."

The exhibit starts with a rocket launch (as any proper space mission does). The dome of the shell shakes, and you can feel the reverberation of the sound in your bones, just like a real launch.

The sound design then moves into a composition written by composer Shane Myrbeck that uses different kinds of sounds to represent the 20 satellites and the International Space Station as they orbit the planet.

NASA's Orbit Pavilion from the outside. Image: Greg Kessler/World Science Festival

Myrbeck used instruments like the piano and cello for land-studying satellites, while he used a blend of sounds from wind and glass instruments for atmosphere-observing probes, and water-derived noises for ocean-observing satellites

The Space Station, which is an international project, is represented by vocal harmony. The vocals change throughout the composition because the people on the station change, Myrbeck said.

"It sounds like an echo of a memory," StudioKCA architect Jason Klimoski told Mashable. He designed the overall installation. "It's very lonely. The sounds are getting more and more space-like because they're more and more lonely. You think about these things way out in space listening — always listening — listening to the Earth, listening to the land."

After the musical interpretation of the satellites, the soundscape pivots again. People in the dome can then hear a voice call out the various names of NASA satellites — SMAP, Aqua, etc. — as they fly overhead and in every direction.

Myrbeck, NASA's David Delgado and Dan Goods gather real-time data to sonically demonstrate where the satellites are in space at any given moment.

Image: NASA JPL

The installation comes at a time when NASA's Earth science objectives have come under fire from members of Congress. Some congressional officials have said that NASA should focus on human and robotic exploration goals instead of Earth research because other government agencies, like the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, are tasked with learning more about our home planet.

But Stofan thinks that NASA is in a particularly unique position to observe Earth on a planet-wide scale, allowing them to focus on complex processes like global climate.

"The Earth is a planet, and only NASA has the unique ability to study planets. The Earth needs to be studied as a planet because it's a very complex system. Other agencies focus on doing research here on the planet. NASA focuses on using the techniques, the tools and pushing the technology for studying our planet from space."

Perhaps NASA should erect the installation in Congress as an experiential lobbying project, because it certainly drives home the fact that the agency has a lot of assets in space that beam back data about Earth everyday.

The exhibit is open in New York through Sunday, and might "resurface" again locally sometime this summer, according to the World Science Festival.