![Confused :?](./images/smilies/icon_confused.gif)
Is it possible to attend this problem for the next version of program?
Mariusz Ku?mi?ski wrote:I have got the following example: when we look at Jupiter from short dinstace (using G key), its Great Red Spot is in the same place, such as we look at Jupiter from Earth with large magnification. Its moons are visible in the same places, too. Normally, we can see all that things later (by telescope) - light goes from Jupiter to us for about 35-40 minutes![]()
Is it possible to attend this problem for the next version of program?
Come on...VikingTechJPL wrote:Mariusz,
Your comments are correct, and Fridger is in error that this is "off-topic" in the "Bugs" department.
The whole discussion about Light Time delay and special relativity more generally, was initiated back in 2002 not by Chris but by me! Having decades of experience in scientific programming and being a professional expert about relativity (unlike Chris), I was aware from the beginning that an extended LT version as you and me would prefer it, cannot be realized in practice. That's why I implemented my "baby" version of LT about 10 years ago.This issue, that "global light-time delay" does not exist in Celestia, has been discussed at length in this forum — in the "Bugs" department. Here's the thread:
http://www.shatters.net/forum/viewtopic.php?f=2&t=15817
In that thread, Chris mentions that he did not implement "global light-time delay" originally because the added computations necessary would hurt performance. The effect of not implementing "global light-time delay" is that objects in Celestia are not plotted in their "actual" locations in 3-D space at their proper times, but only in their positions as they appear from Earth. This difference is not great in most cases, and you'll find an analysis for the major planets in the thread above.
That's what I wrote above. Yet you are surely aware that the observer does NOT need to be located on Earth. Could be anywhere far away from the event under observation.Fridger's addition of Light-Time Delay does a good job of correcting for the times of Solar and Lunar Eclipses on other planets as seen from Earth, though it is not valid for planet occultations.
Celestia development is DEAD ( or at best in deep coma) since about ONE year. Just in case you missed that...I don't know whether Chris has decided to tackle the "global light-time delay" issue in future versions of Celestia, as he suggests that it may not be an easy task.
PlutonianEmpire wrote:"Normal computers"? Come on, it's been ten years.Have "normal" computers REALLY stayed the exact same the ENTIRE ten years, with a "normal" computer having the EXACT SAME configurations and crap performances from ten years ago?