Landing on Earth, looking at night sky
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Topic authorSailmariner
- Posts: 2
- Joined: 13.11.2006
- With us: 18 years
- Location: Newtown, CT
Landing on Earth, looking at night sky
This will seem a waste of a superb program, but can anyone tell me how to land on Earth at a given lat-lon and then remain there, looking at the night sky while I change the date and the speed of time?
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- Developer
- Posts: 1356
- Joined: 07.01.2005
- With us: 19 years 10 months
- Location: Nancy, France
Re: Landing on Earth, looking at night sky
Sailmariner wrote:This will seem a waste of a superb program, but can anyone tell me how to land on Earth at a given lat-lon and then remain there, looking at the night sky while I change the date and the speed of time?
Incredible, this sounds like a real advert for the Lua Edu Tools !
I wouldn't have done it better.
Seriously, you can do it with the Ctrl+G keys.
If you'd like to use a nice interface for that, with some specific tools, you can have a look here :
> http://celestiaproject.net/forum/viewtopic.php?t=10352
Last edited by Vincent on 13.11.2006, 22:46, edited 2 times in total.
@+
Vincent
Celestia Qt4 SVN / Celestia 1.6.1 + Lua Edu Tools v1.2
GeForce 8600 GT 1024MB / AMD Athlon 64 Dual Core / 4Go DDR2 / XP SP3
Vincent
Celestia Qt4 SVN / Celestia 1.6.1 + Lua Edu Tools v1.2
GeForce 8600 GT 1024MB / AMD Athlon 64 Dual Core / 4Go DDR2 / XP SP3
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Topic authorSailmariner
- Posts: 2
- Joined: 13.11.2006
- With us: 18 years
- Location: Newtown, CT
Thanks for the attempts, but neither one seems to work.
1. I believe that the instructions for Planetarium Mode leave a Mac user out in the cold.
2. I attempted to follow the instructions for installing LUA very carefully, but it aborts at start-up.
3. I of course tried to go to the surface of the Earth in ordinary usage of Celestia, but a number of odd results occur. At altitude zero, you don't see anything. At a slightly higher altitude (e.g., 0.1 km or even 100 km) you see the stars but not the Earth horizon.
BTW, I am a pilot and I would not have made the left-right arrow keys as roll controls, but rather, yaw controls. I would have been happy with Shift-L or -R for roll. The up-down arrows are backwards if you are flying (e.g., up arrow should bring your nose up, not down). I don't know if this is only on Macs, but it is highly counter-intuitive. I feel my spacecraft was built by the lowest bidder.
1. I believe that the instructions for Planetarium Mode leave a Mac user out in the cold.
2. I attempted to follow the instructions for installing LUA very carefully, but it aborts at start-up.
3. I of course tried to go to the surface of the Earth in ordinary usage of Celestia, but a number of odd results occur. At altitude zero, you don't see anything. At a slightly higher altitude (e.g., 0.1 km or even 100 km) you see the stars but not the Earth horizon.
BTW, I am a pilot and I would not have made the left-right arrow keys as roll controls, but rather, yaw controls. I would have been happy with Shift-L or -R for roll. The up-down arrows are backwards if you are flying (e.g., up arrow should bring your nose up, not down). I don't know if this is only on Macs, but it is highly counter-intuitive. I feel my spacecraft was built by the lowest bidder.