c is the limit!

General discussion about Celestia that doesn't fit into other forums.
Topic author
orion
Posts: 10
Joined: 03.10.2003
With us: 21 years 1 month
Location: Chennai, India

c is the limit!

Post #1by orion » 04.10.2003, 10:10

Hi,
I downloaded celestia quite a few months ago, but only seriously into it for the past few days. While traversing the universe at unimaginably high speeds, something struck me :idea: ...relativity. Instead viewing blackness at 1^10 ly/s how about viewing relativistic effect at speed near c? This thought may have come up earlier to any other user, which I may not be aware of. I am not a computer expert...so I leave this challenge to all those who are.

P.S: Here is a site that has a software featuring all the relativistic effects:-
http://www.tat.physik.uni-tuebingen.de/ ~weiskopf/vr/software.html

which unfortunately didn't work on my machine :(

Rassilon
Posts: 1887
Joined: 29.01.2002
With us: 22 years 9 months
Location: Altair

Post #2by Rassilon » 04.10.2003, 16:10

You might want to take a look at Marc's work on Celestia...From what I understand he might be implementing some of this in Celestia at some point with his Mostly Harmless project...

http://mostlyharmless.sourceforge.net/index.htm
I'm trying to teach the cavemen how to play scrabble, its uphill work. The only word they know is Uhh and they dont know how to spell it!

astrum aspicio
Posts: 6
Joined: 01.12.2002
With us: 21 years 11 months

Re: c is the limit!

Post #3by astrum aspicio » 12.10.2003, 09:16

orion wrote:Hi,
I downloaded celestia quite a few months ago, but only seriously into it for the past few days. While traversing the universe at unimaginably high speeds, something struck me :idea: ...relativity. Instead viewing blackness at 1^10 ly/s how about viewing relativistic effect at speed near c? This thought may have come up earlier to any other user, which I may not be aware of. I am not a computer expert...so I leave this challenge to all those who are.

P.S: Here is a site that has a software featuring all the relativistic effects:-
http://www.tat.physik.uni-tuebingen.de/ ~weiskopf/vr/software.html

which unfortunately didn't work on my machine :(


Interesting idea! Relativistic effects should also be noticable when hovering near massive gravitational bodies... (of course, the user should be able to disable relativistic effects if he wants)


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