Sedna orbit weirdness
Sedna orbit weirdness
First of all,Sedna seem desconected from its own orbit.Second,in some places,the orbit elipse turns into a line.See below:
Re: Sedna orbit weirdness
Danielj, both your images regard comet Borrelly, not Sedna.danielj wrote:First of all,Sedna seem desconected from its own orbit.Second,in some places,the orbit elipse turns into a line.See below:
Can you verify, please?
Regarding your celestia.cfg line
OrbitPathSamplePoints 100
did you try to rise that value to, e.g., 1000?
May be it helps.
Moreover, did you try to re-install the graphic drivers?
My little cent.
Bye
Andrea
"Something is always better than nothing!"
HP Omen 15-DC1040nl- Intel® Core i7 9750H, 2.6/4.5 GHz- 1TB PCIe NVMe M.2 SSD+ 1TB SATA 6 SSD- 32GB SDRAM DDR4 2666 MHz- Nvidia GeForce GTX 1660 Ti 6 GB-WIN 11 PRO
HP Omen 15-DC1040nl- Intel® Core i7 9750H, 2.6/4.5 GHz- 1TB PCIe NVMe M.2 SSD+ 1TB SATA 6 SSD- 32GB SDRAM DDR4 2666 MHz- Nvidia GeForce GTX 1660 Ti 6 GB-WIN 11 PRO
Re: Sedna orbit weirdness
I found the Sedna orbit,but I can?t believe how eccentic the orbit is.Sedna is now around 98 AU.In the future,will be more than 500 AU.It appears Sedna don?t belong to the Solar System...
And correcting the title:it?s Borrely?s orbit weirdness.
Sorry,it?s not Borrely.Borrely aphelio is not far from Jupiter?s orbit...
But I found another discrepancy in Celestia 1.5.1.
Eris IS a planet and Pluto NOT...
And correcting the title:it?s Borrely?s orbit weirdness.
Sorry,it?s not Borrely.Borrely aphelio is not far from Jupiter?s orbit...
But I found another discrepancy in Celestia 1.5.1.
Eris IS a planet and Pluto NOT...