chris wrote:t00fri wrote:Chris,
as you see, I am responding step-by-step to your comments:
Like this one:
Chris wrote:The star colors look odd, particularly the green.
Well I don't think they are looking "odd" since the
original 1777x1864 true-color TIF of M 80 has them, too:
Here are a few green stars from the Hubble photo that have precisely the same RGB composition as my green stars:
I have quite a bit of practice in transfering color profiles from photos /quantitatively/ to my code....Just compare the green color in Vincents screenshot above.
But how was the photo produced? What filters were used, and how were the filtered images combined to produce an RGB image? Here's an image of M13 where no green stars are visible:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Image:Mess ... ikiSky.jpgMore importantly, we know that the stars in a globular cluster have (roughly) blackbody spectra, and that no blackbody spectrum will appear green to the human eye. To keep the color of stars in globulars consistent with the color of other stars, you could use the temperature->RGB tables in starcolor.cpp.
--Chris
Unfortunately, they don't reveal the "secrets of their image manipulations" to the public, I am afraid. All I did at this point was to transfer the spectrum from Hubble's M80
legacy photo into my code.
We know that M13 and some others are dominated by bluish stars. We also know that apart from that Hubble image, the color rendition of MOST globular photos is simply HORRIBLE. I have a VERY big collection with many amazing contradictions.
Certainly the color pattern of globulars differes a lot! That's why I want to proceed asap to include INDIVIDUAL color spectra as inferred from
scientific catalogs.
Right now ( = principle of small steps
) all my globulars have the SAME, generic color profile as abstracted from Hubble. Since Hubble shows green stars, I show green stars
Why don't you write a little mail to Hubble's legacy administrators that their "green M 80 stars look
odd" ?
Fridger
PS: I would appreciate a solid citation about your statement that globulars exhibit black body spectra with large accuracy. I know quite different stories...