Hi all,
Fridger wrote:Personally I consider the transparency issue very important, since indirectly it also influences the conspicuous ring shadow patterns considerably etc.
I don't say that the transparency issue is unimportant. I will furhter try to improve my rings in this case. At the moment I don't pay to much attention to the shadows because they are also affected by Celestia.
granthutchison wrote:If the alpha channel isn't accurate, you'll never convincingly model ring shadows
Grant, I never tried to adjust my rings for correct shadows because this should be the last step and can't done by me.
granthutchison wrote:(Chris can fiddle the shadow density,...)
These parameter in 'celestia.cfg' would be very nice.
granthutchison wrote:and you'll never model the correct appearance of Saturn's disc seen through the rings (which we can check against photographs).
I agry and as you metion "check against photographs" that's exact what I do - very, very carfully.
granthutchison wrote:So "accurate appearance" does depend very strongly on an accurate alpha channel in many instances.
Not in front of a black backround! For this case I can say my rings appears nearly exact.
![Wink ;-)](./images/smilies/icon_wink.gif)
granthutchison wrote:You also have to beware the stretched contrast routinely used in ring photographs, which creates the false appearance of bright lanes and black gaps in opaque rings, and pulls out detail of very faint structures, making them appear brighter and denser than they actually are.
Grant, I see you think similar to me "before" I build this rings and looked at all those Cassini picturures. I thought bright lanes and black gaps in opaque rings aren't possible. These structures can be only caused be transparency of the rings. But look at this picture:
As you can see the dark "gaps" of the B-ring don't change there apeariance in front of Saturn or the black space. Further we see that the inner part of the B-ring lock very similar in color and transparency to the A-ring. The C-ring and especialy it's shadow dosen't look so nice because the raw images are overexposed. Nevertheless we can see that the matierial of this ring is dark but not too dark to appear still bright in front of the black space.
Before I forget I'd adapted the albedo of my rings to the latest complete Saturn picture to get the correct colors and avoid unnatural contrast.
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Grant, from the scientific point my work may not accurate but you should know I try always my best.
I'm always open for a discussion that help something to improve. My aim is that all
should appear as real as possible in Celestia and when this can be done with a bit (unscientific) artwork - why not?
Jens