The Planetary Content Team at NASA's Ames Research Center develops software that
makes it easier for scientists and engineers to publish and access Earth and planetary
imagery and data via the Internet. This includes both educational/outreach content aimed
at the general public as well as technical data aimed at the scientific community.
Headquartered in the Intelligent Systems Division at Ames, the team also includes
partners in other areas of the agency and elsewhere.
The software toolkit, currently under development, builds on open-source software such as the NASA Vision Workbench, open standards such as the Open Gospatial Consortium's Web Map Service (WMS), and freely-available visualization tools such as Google Earth. To demonstrate the refine its toolkit, the Planetary Content Team also develops sample planetary content in collaboration with scientists and researchers.
You can now explore Mars in stunning interactive 3D using the new Mars 3D feature of Google Earth 5! Mars 3D includes global 3D terrain; featured satellite images, including captions describing the science behind the breathtaking scenes; detailed maps of the Mars rover traverses, including StreetView-like panoramas; complete browsable indexes of all satellite images taken by the five major orbital cameras; and much more.
Besides providing a rich, immersive 3D view of Mars that will aid public understanding of Mars science, Google Mars 3D gives researchers a platform for sharing data similar to what Google Earth provides for Earth scientists. The new Mars mode also allows users to add their own 3D content to the Mars map to share with the world.
You can learn more about this project from our Google Mars 3D info page.
We are developing and have begun to release extensions to the Google Maps API (and soon also the OpenLayers API) to make these web mapping frameworks more powerful and easy to use for Earth and planetary scientists.
The first extensions that we have released provide support for north- and south-polar stereographic projections, allowing web maps of the Lunar and Martian poles, and also provide a new and improved general-purpose global Mars base map.
You can learn more about this project from our NASA Maps Extensions info page.
The KML file format has emerged as the de facto standard for sharing geospatial data for display and visualization. We have begun releasing key Lunar and Planetary datasets in KML form, so you can easily browse them using Google Earth or another KML-compliant geobrowser. We also provide links to other Lunar and planetary KML created elsewhere.
You can learn more about this project from our Lunar and Planetary KML info page.
The Planetary Content Team develops mapping and educational tools for worlds beyond planet Earth.
The first of these to be publicly released is a set of updates to Google Moon,
including:

The Planetary Content Team also manages the NASA Gallery layer in Google Earth (formerly known as NASA Featured Content). The first release includes:
+Autonomous Systems and Robotics