Hi,
First -- Celestia is a fantastic piece of work. Thank you, thank you.
I'm creating a Solar System animation using Celestia. The animation starts at the surface of the sun and then zooms out revealing the orbits of the inner planets. I have a celx script for this and I mostly have it working except for one little glitch. As I zoom out I increase the speed at which time elapses to match the scale that we're looking at.
Near the surface of the Sun I have it running about 10 times faster so I can see the the vortices and prominences moving (I'm using one of the really nice Solar textures made avail by the community).
As you zoom out to the innermost planets I kick it up to about 150x to show the orbits of the planets. (Looks pretty sweet as I sync'd it to a conjunction of Halley's comet and mars).
Between these two points is where I have the problem. Even though the sun looks good as it zooms out, the dramatically increased time scale makes the sun rotate so fast that the flares and other effects create a fuzzy hash which just looks nasty.
I've thought of several ways to fix this:
1. Switch solar models to one without flares before I speed up time dramatically. (Don't know if I can do this in the sim)
2. Set the rotation period of the sun to some very slow rate -- or zero. (Don't know how to do this in the sim)
3. Leave the sun enabled, but somehow remove it from the simulation. (can this be done?)
4. Run the animation twice. Once with the cool solar prominences and once with a simple solar model. Use a video editor to cut between sims right at the point where the sun goes too fast.
Any help would be greatly appreciated.
Thanks,
eris
Problem Scripting Time Scale For Animation
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Re: Problem Scripting Time Scale For Animation
Hi! A solution could be to define at the beginning of the script a table containing all 3D objects relevant to the "solar flares" SSC. For example:
while within their SSC must be add to each one the propriety "Visible" set to "false", in order to start the script with the flares hidden:
and within the celx, still at the beginning, separately from the rest, add the following string and function:
Now, when the Sol is selected, would be executed the following string among the others:
This will made flares visible. When the script instead moves toward planets, still somewhere within the code:
and the flares will be hidden again.
Code: Select all
local sol_flares =
{
"Sol/_sunflare1",
"Sol/_sunflare2",
"Sol/_sunflare3",
"Sol/_sunflare4",
"Sol/_sunflare5"
}
while within their SSC must be add to each one the propriety "Visible" set to "false", in order to start the script with the flares hidden:
Code: Select all
Visible false
and within the celx, still at the beginning, separately from the rest, add the following string and function:
Code: Select all
local obs = celestia:getobserver() -- do not add whether you already have it
function hide_sol_flares(obs)
for k, object in pair(sol_flares) do
obj_sol_flares = celestia:find(object)
obj_sol_flares:setvisible(not obj_sol_flares:visible())
end
end
Now, when the Sol is selected, would be executed the following string among the others:
Code: Select all
hide_sol_flares(obs)
This will made flares visible. When the script instead moves toward planets, still somewhere within the code:
Code: Select all
hide_sol_flares(obs)
and the flares will be hidden again.
Never at rest.
Massimo
Massimo
- Marco Klunder
- Posts: 181
- Joined: 20.02.2008
- Age: 62
- With us: 16 years 9 months
- Location: The Netherlands
Re: Problem Scripting Time Scale For Animation
Next to Fenerit's suggestion,
Depending on the Sol addon you have in use, there are Sol addons with solar flares and prominences implemented as "clouds".
Simply pressing the [i] key, or turning off cloud rendering in the script might also solve your issue.
Marco
Depending on the Sol addon you have in use, there are Sol addons with solar flares and prominences implemented as "clouds".
Simply pressing the [i] key, or turning off cloud rendering in the script might also solve your issue.
Marco
Marco Klunder
email: marco.klunder@xs4all.nl
Windows10 PD 3.0 GHz, 2 GB of RAM, Nvidia GeForce 6700 XL
Celestia161 / SVN + Lua Edu Tools v1.2 Beta9, Celestia160-ED and Celestia1621
email: marco.klunder@xs4all.nl
Windows10 PD 3.0 GHz, 2 GB of RAM, Nvidia GeForce 6700 XL
Celestia161 / SVN + Lua Edu Tools v1.2 Beta9, Celestia160-ED and Celestia1621
Re: Problem Scripting Time Scale For Animation
Massimo, Marco...
Thank you very much. Massimo -- I was working on a similar concept, except the 'visible' setting doesn't work on stars. If I can, however, refer to the prominence components as 3d objects which I can turn on and off then that should work.
In order to have the prominences erupt at the right time I had to change their orientation and location. This was very tricky since I had to make selective changes to see which parameters controlled the visual effects.
Marco: Yes they are modeled as clouds and I tried use the I key to supress them, but I believe there are other components that are still visible. I'll report back.
I think some combination of these will work. If nothing else I can fall back to a video editor.
Thanks again. Awesome program.
eris
Thank you very much. Massimo -- I was working on a similar concept, except the 'visible' setting doesn't work on stars. If I can, however, refer to the prominence components as 3d objects which I can turn on and off then that should work.
In order to have the prominences erupt at the right time I had to change their orientation and location. This was very tricky since I had to make selective changes to see which parameters controlled the visual effects.
Marco: Yes they are modeled as clouds and I tried use the I key to supress them, but I believe there are other components that are still visible. I'll report back.
I think some combination of these will work. If nothing else I can fall back to a video editor.
Thanks again. Awesome program.
eris
Re: Problem Scripting Time Scale For Animation
Marco,
I'm using the one that models flares as clouds. Even though pressing 'I' makes clouds invisible, there is still some component that becomes visible near the flare bases when the size of the sun shrinks to slightly larger than a pinpoint. It's at this point that it becomes ugly.
Can I still use Massimo's idea to make them invisible?
I'm using the one that models flares as clouds. Even though pressing 'I' makes clouds invisible, there is still some component that becomes visible near the flare bases when the size of the sun shrinks to slightly larger than a pinpoint. It's at this point that it becomes ugly.
Can I still use Massimo's idea to make them invisible?
Re: Problem Scripting Time Scale For Animation
Meanwhile waiting the Marco's replay...
...usually a cloud-addon does use one or more fake spheroids/3D models to which add the cloud directive. Probably are this fictitius objects which are then visibles when the Sun shrink down, being declared separately.
...usually a cloud-addon does use one or more fake spheroids/3D models to which add the cloud directive. Probably are this fictitius objects which are then visibles when the Sun shrink down, being declared separately.
Never at rest.
Massimo
Massimo
Re: Problem Scripting Time Scale For Animation
Just to bring the forum up to date...
The code suggested by Fenerit was exactly what I needed. Even setting the default visibility to 'false' was required so that it reset properly when you ran it a second time.
As soon as the flares are out of range I switch them off. The transition is very smooth.
A couple notes:
The new texture package for the Sun doesn't give the flares names in the SSC file, so you have to rename them from " " to "_flare1" .. "_flare5".
I recorded the entire animation in Linux using 'glc_capture' and 'glc_play'. The capture utility allows you to set the window to fullscreen and press Shift-F8 when you're ready to record. You can then convert the captured data to an avi (if that's what you want) or do like did and covert the individual frames to pngs to pull into Premiere or some other video editor lossless.
BTW: Fenerit: I kept calling you Mossimo or something because that's in your signature. Sorry.
The code suggested by Fenerit was exactly what I needed. Even setting the default visibility to 'false' was required so that it reset properly when you ran it a second time.
As soon as the flares are out of range I switch them off. The transition is very smooth.
A couple notes:
The new texture package for the Sun doesn't give the flares names in the SSC file, so you have to rename them from " " to "_flare1" .. "_flare5".
I recorded the entire animation in Linux using 'glc_capture' and 'glc_play'. The capture utility allows you to set the window to fullscreen and press Shift-F8 when you're ready to record. You can then convert the captured data to an avi (if that's what you want) or do like did and covert the individual frames to pngs to pull into Premiere or some other video editor lossless.
BTW: Fenerit: I kept calling you Mossimo or something because that's in your signature. Sorry.
Re: Problem Scripting Time Scale For Animation
eris wrote:The code suggested by Fenerit was exactly what I needed. Even setting the default visibility to 'false' was required so that it reset properly when you ran it a second time.
Good!
eris wrote:BTW: Fenerit: I kept calling you Mossimo or something because that's in your signature. Sorry.
No sorry; Massimo (Maximus, Max) is my name.
Never at rest.
Massimo
Massimo
- Marco Klunder
- Posts: 181
- Joined: 20.02.2008
- Age: 62
- With us: 16 years 9 months
- Location: The Netherlands
Re: Problem Scripting Time Scale For Animation
Good to see you have a solution.
Marco
Marco
Marco Klunder
email: marco.klunder@xs4all.nl
Windows10 PD 3.0 GHz, 2 GB of RAM, Nvidia GeForce 6700 XL
Celestia161 / SVN + Lua Edu Tools v1.2 Beta9, Celestia160-ED and Celestia1621
email: marco.klunder@xs4all.nl
Windows10 PD 3.0 GHz, 2 GB of RAM, Nvidia GeForce 6700 XL
Celestia161 / SVN + Lua Edu Tools v1.2 Beta9, Celestia160-ED and Celestia1621