Copeland's Septet of Galaxies in FT1.2!
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Topic authort00fri
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Copeland's Septet of Galaxies in FT1.2!
Hi,
besides the famous Stephan's Quintet, Copeland's Septet group of galaxies in Leo is just amazing! These 7 galaxies are between 14.5 and 16.2 magnitudes dim. So once more nothing would be seen in a "castrated" version of my deepsky.dsc data base.
Have a look below, how the septet in Celestia-FT1.2 compares with the best photo I could find. [For clarity, I eliminated some stars in that photo]. Note the perfect agreement in size, orientation and galaxy types!
Enjoy,
Bye Fridger
besides the famous Stephan's Quintet, Copeland's Septet group of galaxies in Leo is just amazing! These 7 galaxies are between 14.5 and 16.2 magnitudes dim. So once more nothing would be seen in a "castrated" version of my deepsky.dsc data base.
Have a look below, how the septet in Celestia-FT1.2 compares with the best photo I could find. [For clarity, I eliminated some stars in that photo]. Note the perfect agreement in size, orientation and galaxy types!
Enjoy,
Bye Fridger
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looks great!
My Celestia page: Spica system, planetary magnitudes script, updated demo.cel, Quad system
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Absolutely wonderful Fridger!! Thanks again for your work. My students are amazed by the vastness of the universe your and Toti's addon makes visible. We will definitely be visiting the Septet this week.
Homebrew:
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WinXP Pro SP2
Asus A7N8X-E Deluxe
AMD Athlon XP 3000/333 2.16 GHz
1 GB Crucial RAM
80 GB WD SATA drive
ATI AIW 9600XT 128M
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Topic authort00fri
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buggs_moran wrote:Absolutely wonderful Fridger!! Thanks again for your work. My students are amazed by the vastness of the universe your and Toti's addon makes visible. We will definitely be visiting the Septet this week.
Great to hear! But this is NOT an add-on . It's meanwhile completely integrated into the official Celestia archive in the CVS.
Bye Fridger
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That is totally awesome! It looks exactly like the photo! I've always been amazed by galaxy clusters. Reminds me how vast the universe is!
Hi guys. Listen, they're telling me the uh,
generators won't take it, the ship is breaking apart and all that. Just, FYI.
(Athlon X2 6000+ Dual Core 3Ghz, 8GB DDR2-800, 500GB SATA 7200RPM HD, 580W,
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generators won't take it, the ship is breaking apart and all that. Just, FYI.
(Athlon X2 6000+ Dual Core 3Ghz, 8GB DDR2-800, 500GB SATA 7200RPM HD, 580W,
GeForce 9600GT-512, 64Bit, Vista Home Premium)
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Topic authort00fri
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BlindedByTheLight wrote:Fridger, gotta a question for ya... when you say you removed stars for clarity, were those local stars from the Milky Way or interstellar stars (if that even makes any sense...)?
I'm assuming local but just wanted to check...
Well Copeland's Septet is located in Leo, which is almost "oposite" to the visible Milky Way branch. Nothing to do with MilkyWay, I guess.
But of course I did not inspect these few stars in any way.
Bye Fridger
In general, foreground stars that have to be removed are members of the Milky Way galaxy, although they may be members of the halo, of the thick disk or of the thin disk. From our point of view within the thin disk, all three regions are visible in most directions.
In other words, foreground stars are almost always local stars (local to our Milky Way galaxy, I mean, not necessarily very close to the sun). In a few situations extremely high magnifications of extremely long exposure images can resolve stars of the closest galaxies. In some circumstances those stars would be "foreground" stars for images of more distant galaxies. That's not the case here.
"Interstellar" means "between the stars," which doesn't make much sense in this situation.
In other words, foreground stars are almost always local stars (local to our Milky Way galaxy, I mean, not necessarily very close to the sun). In a few situations extremely high magnifications of extremely long exposure images can resolve stars of the closest galaxies. In some circumstances those stars would be "foreground" stars for images of more distant galaxies. That's not the case here.
"Interstellar" means "between the stars," which doesn't make much sense in this situation.
Selden
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Topic authort00fri
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selden wrote:In general, foreground stars that have to be removed are members of the Milky Way galaxy, although they may be members of the halo, of the thick disk or of the thin disk. From our point of view within the thin disk, all three regions are visible in most directions.
In other words, foreground stars are almost always local stars (local to our Milky Way galaxy, I mean, not necessarily very close to the sun). In a few situations extremely high magnifications of extremely long exposure images can resolve stars of the closest galaxies. In some circumstances those stars would be "foreground" stars for images of more distant galaxies. That's not the case here.
"Interstellar" means "between the stars," which doesn't make much sense in this situation.
Selden's argument is certainly correct. Sorry I must have been "sleeping"
Bye Fridger
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t00fri wrote:buggs_moran wrote:Absolutely wonderful Fridger!! Thanks again for your work. My students are amazed by the vastness of the universe your and Toti's addon makes visible. We will definitely be visiting the Septet this week.
Great to hear! But this is NOT an add-on . It's meanwhile completely integrated into the official Celestia archive in the CVS.
Bye Fridger
Okay, addition to Celestia's main program
I was surfing the stars and found these as well. The first is Hickson Compact Group 68 and the second is The Leo Quartet.
http://members.aol.com/anonglxy/besthick.htm
AND
http://www.astromatt.com/GalaxyPages/LeoQuartet.html
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CELs would have been nice
Fridger's
cel://SyncOrbit/Earth/2005-12-23T16:09:41.00001?x=UExz+PGo0Cm9DA&y=t71poWxVNg&z=I5urdfJCpnbw/////////w&ow=0.750577&ox=-0.016637&oy=-0.619913&oz=0.228180&track=NGC%203753&select=NGC%203753&fov=0.112117&ts=0.000000<d=0&rf=317335&lm=383
Bugg's
cel://Follow/Earth/2005-12-23T16:17:56.86809?x=WI8ZElvRFyq9DA&y=H0K5QG4A8v///////////w&z=9WjBs7Fo43fw/////////w&ow=0.752569&ox=0.107337&oy=-0.599790&oz=0.249741&select=NGC%203628&fov=1.741415&ts=1.000000<d=0&rf=300951&lm=367
EDIT:
I can't seem to get CEL urls to work. I have BBCode on, and HTML off.
cel://SyncOrbit/Earth/2005-12-23T16:09:41.00001?x=UExz+PGo0Cm9DA&y=t71poWxVNg&z=I5urdfJCpnbw/////////w&ow=0.750577&ox=-0.016637&oy=-0.619913&oz=0.228180&track=NGC%203753&select=NGC%203753&fov=0.112117&ts=0.000000<d=0&rf=317335&lm=383
Bugg's
cel://Follow/Earth/2005-12-23T16:17:56.86809?x=WI8ZElvRFyq9DA&y=H0K5QG4A8v///////////w&z=9WjBs7Fo43fw/////////w&ow=0.752569&ox=0.107337&oy=-0.599790&oz=0.249741&select=NGC%203628&fov=1.741415&ts=1.000000<d=0&rf=300951&lm=367
EDIT:
I can't seem to get CEL urls to work. I have BBCode on, and HTML off.
Just because you can do something with a computer, doesn't mean you should.
Re: CELs would have been nice
JackCrow wrote:Fridger's
cel://SyncOrbit/Earth/2005-12-23T16:09:41.00001?x=UExz+PGo0Cm9DA&y=t71poWxVNg&z=I5urdfJCpnbw/////////w&ow=0.750577&ox=-0.016637&oy=-0.619913&oz=0.228180&track=NGC%203753&select=NGC%203753&fov=0.112117&ts=0.000000<d=0&rf=317335&lm=383
Bugg's
cel://Follow/Earth/2005-12-23T16:17:56.86809?x=WI8ZElvRFyq9DA&y=H0K5QG4A8v///////////w&z=9WjBs7Fo43fw/////////w&ow=0.752569&ox=0.107337&oy=-0.599790&oz=0.249741&select=NGC%203628&fov=1.741415&ts=1.000000<d=0&rf=300951&lm=367
EDIT:
I can't seem to get CEL urls to work. I have BBCode on, and HTML off.
cel://SyncOrbit/Earth/2005-12-23T16:09: ... 335&lm=383
Bugg's
cel://Follow/Earth/2005-12-23T16:17:56. ... 951&lm=367
not cel://
windows 10 directX 12 version
celestia 1.7.0 64 bits
with a general handicap of 80% and it makes much d' efforts for the community and s' expimer, thank you d' to be understanding.
celestia 1.7.0 64 bits
with a general handicap of 80% and it makes much d' efforts for the community and s' expimer, thank you d' to be understanding.