Pictures from Celestia

General discussion about Celestia that doesn't fit into other forums.
Avatar
Cham M
Posts: 4324
Joined: 14.01.2004
Age: 60
With us: 20 years 8 months
Location: Montreal

Re: Pictures from Celestia

Post #81by Cham » 13.03.2013, 01:39

An Orion-like stellar nursery in the making :)
Orion1.jpg

Orion2.jpg


This is no-texture-on-a-mesh ! Fully volumetric all-sprites nebula.

EDIT : Another nebula prototype...
Nebula.jpg
"Well! I've often seen a cat without a grin", thought Alice; "but a grin without a cat! It's the most curious thing I ever saw in all my life!"

kristoffer
Posts: 271
Joined: 19.02.2011
Age: 29
With us: 13 years 7 months
Location: Bod?, Nordland, Norway

Re: Pictures from Celestia

Post #82by kristoffer » 14.03.2013, 17:33

The 2 newly discovered brown dwarfs, only 6.5 light-years from our Sun.
Computer specs

ASUS CG8350-NR001S
Windows® 8 64-bits
Intel® Core™ i7-3770 3.9GHz
Intel® H67 Express Chipset
12GB DDR3 1333 MHz
1000 GB SATA3 7200 rpm
NVIDIA® GeForce® GTX 660 3072 MB
1 x 8 Channel Audio
1000Mbit/s Ethernet LAN
802.11bgn

Avatar
Cham M
Posts: 4324
Joined: 14.01.2004
Age: 60
With us: 20 years 8 months
Location: Montreal

Re: Pictures from Celestia

Post #83by Cham » 14.03.2013, 19:39

A star fell ill and exploded ! :wink:

remnant.jpg
"Well! I've often seen a cat without a grin", thought Alice; "but a grin without a cat! It's the most curious thing I ever saw in all my life!"

Avatar
Cham M
Posts: 4324
Joined: 14.01.2004
Age: 60
With us: 20 years 8 months
Location: Montreal

Re: Pictures from Celestia

Post #84by Cham » 15.03.2013, 14:53

A family of five irregular nebulae :
irregular.jpg


These 3D models are great with stars inside, and placed in the galactic arms.

Here's a movie of one of them :
http://fsgregs.startlogic.com/Public_Fi ... ebula3.mov
"Well! I've often seen a cat without a grin", thought Alice; "but a grin without a cat! It's the most curious thing I ever saw in all my life!"

Avatar
Cham M
Posts: 4324
Joined: 14.01.2004
Age: 60
With us: 20 years 8 months
Location: Montreal

Re: Pictures from Celestia

Post #85by Cham » 15.03.2013, 16:56

A Mega Orion-like nebula ! (the stars aren't placed yet) :D
mega1.jpg

mega2.jpg

mega3.jpg
"Well! I've often seen a cat without a grin", thought Alice; "but a grin without a cat! It's the most curious thing I ever saw in all my life!"

Avatar
Cham M
Posts: 4324
Joined: 14.01.2004
Age: 60
With us: 20 years 8 months
Location: Montreal

Re: Pictures from Celestia

Post #86by Cham » 17.03.2013, 00:02

Huge nebulae in M33 :)
Large1.jpg

Large2.jpg

Large3.jpg
"Well! I've often seen a cat without a grin", thought Alice; "but a grin without a cat! It's the most curious thing I ever saw in all my life!"

Avatar
Cham M
Posts: 4324
Joined: 14.01.2004
Age: 60
With us: 20 years 8 months
Location: Montreal

Re: Pictures from Celestia

Post #87by Cham » 17.03.2013, 00:26

More views :

nuage1.jpg

nuage2.jpg

nuage3.jpg
"Well! I've often seen a cat without a grin", thought Alice; "but a grin without a cat! It's the most curious thing I ever saw in all my life!"

Avatar
Cham M
Posts: 4324
Joined: 14.01.2004
Age: 60
With us: 20 years 8 months
Location: Montreal

Re: Pictures from Celestia

Post #88by Cham » 17.03.2013, 13:25

This picture isn't from Celestia. This topic is about pictures taken within Celestia, so you're OFF-topic. :roll:
"Well! I've often seen a cat without a grin", thought Alice; "but a grin without a cat! It's the most curious thing I ever saw in all my life!"

Avatar
Cham M
Posts: 4324
Joined: 14.01.2004
Age: 60
With us: 20 years 8 months
Location: Montreal

Re: Pictures from Celestia

Post #89by Cham » 17.03.2013, 14:59

argelesmer wrote:
Cham wrote:This picture isn't from Celestia.:roll:
what motivates you to say that ?

It is evident. :roll: Don't take people for idiots ! This is enough for a ban.

Or else, prove it by showing the corners info on your picture, with maybe other Celestia elements (stars, galaxies...) !
"Well! I've often seen a cat without a grin", thought Alice; "but a grin without a cat! It's the most curious thing I ever saw in all my life!"

Avatar
Cham M
Posts: 4324
Joined: 14.01.2004
Age: 60
With us: 20 years 8 months
Location: Montreal

Re: Pictures from Celestia

Post #90by Cham » 18.03.2013, 00:24

An experiment that turned out to be beautifull :
jewel1.jpg

jewel2.jpg

jewel3.jpg
"Well! I've often seen a cat without a grin", thought Alice; "but a grin without a cat! It's the most curious thing I ever saw in all my life!"

Avatar
Cham M
Posts: 4324
Joined: 14.01.2004
Age: 60
With us: 20 years 8 months
Location: Montreal

Re: Pictures from Celestia

Post #91by Cham » 19.03.2013, 13:38

The galactic core of NGC 404, with thousands of stars :

NGC404GC1.jpg

NGC404GC2.jpg


The model have been designed to match Celestia's galaxies rendering.
A view with the galaxies rendering turned OFF :
NGC404GC3.jpg
"Well! I've often seen a cat without a grin", thought Alice; "but a grin without a cat! It's the most curious thing I ever saw in all my life!"

Avatar
t00fri
Developer
Posts: 8772
Joined: 29.03.2002
Age: 22
With us: 22 years 5 months
Location: Hamburg, Germany

Re: Pictures from Celestia

Post #92by t00fri » 19.03.2013, 19:12

So I got curious how NGC 404 would look like in celestia.Sci in visible light. Here is the result along with a Hubble photo of NGC 404 (note I am using the SDSS color profile, while the Hubble profile is rather different):

celestia.Sci (far away view):
n404.jpg


Hubble photo,
Image

celestia.Sci (close-up view):
n404_close.jpg


Fridger
Image

Avatar
Cham M
Posts: 4324
Joined: 14.01.2004
Age: 60
With us: 20 years 8 months
Location: Montreal

Re: Pictures from Celestia

Post #93by Cham » 19.03.2013, 19:20

argelesmer wrote:To get an idea of reality, here are 2 photos of NGC-404 (visible & UV).
NGC404.jpg

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/GALEX

Very different from the images above no ?

The picture that you're showing us clearly state that it's in the UV wavelenght band. In the visible (left part of the picture), we see nothing ! (the bright orange spot on the left is just a star, not the galaxy itself). So there is no contradiction with my model.

Secondly, my NGC 404 nebula model is only the central core, not the entire galaxy, which is still represented as a lenticular (S0) in Celestia.

And thirdly, your picture isn't showing a close-up of the central core.

NGC 404 is a very small galaxy, and we can't see its central core with our current technology. So we are still free to represent it in any way we like.
Last edited by Cham on 19.03.2013, 19:49, edited 3 times in total.
"Well! I've often seen a cat without a grin", thought Alice; "but a grin without a cat! It's the most curious thing I ever saw in all my life!"

Avatar
t00fri
Developer
Posts: 8772
Joined: 29.03.2002
Age: 22
With us: 22 years 5 months
Location: Hamburg, Germany

Re: Pictures from Celestia

Post #94by t00fri » 19.03.2013, 19:26

While the GALEX photo also shows NGC 404 in visible light (on the left) one should note that the orange color is NOT a real color, since a monocromatic DSS image was displayed. These are all orange colored ;-) . In contrast, the Hubble image I have shown for comparison represents a true color display (given the Hubble filters...)

Fridger
Image

Avatar
t00fri
Developer
Posts: 8772
Joined: 29.03.2002
Age: 22
With us: 22 years 5 months
Location: Hamburg, Germany

Re: Pictures from Celestia

Post #95by t00fri » 19.03.2013, 19:43

...and since I am at it... here is a neat Sa galaxy, NGC 4698, in celestia.Sci:

[click on image by all means!]
n4698.jpg


Enjoy,
Fridger
Image

Avatar
Cham M
Posts: 4324
Joined: 14.01.2004
Age: 60
With us: 20 years 8 months
Location: Montreal

Re: Pictures from Celestia

Post #96by Cham » 19.03.2013, 19:48

t00fri wrote:...and since I am at it... here is a neat Sa galaxy, NGC 4698, in celestia.Sci:

[click on image by all means!]
n4698.jpg


That's very nice. You should put this picture in the irregular nebula topic at CM, to illustrate the "granulity" I was talking about.
"Well! I've often seen a cat without a grin", thought Alice; "but a grin without a cat! It's the most curious thing I ever saw in all my life!"

Avatar
t00fri
Developer
Posts: 8772
Joined: 29.03.2002
Age: 22
With us: 22 years 5 months
Location: Hamburg, Germany

Re: Pictures from Celestia

Post #97by t00fri » 19.03.2013, 19:59

Cham wrote:
t00fri wrote:...and since I am at it... here is a neat Sa galaxy, NGC 4698, in celestia.Sci:

[click on image by all means!]
n4698.jpg


That's very nice. You should put this picture in the irregular nebula topic at CM, to illustrate the "granulity" I was talking about.

That was actually the reason why I shot the image 2 days ago ;-) . Let's see when I get around starting the discussion at CM...

Fridger
Image

Avatar
Cham M
Posts: 4324
Joined: 14.01.2004
Age: 60
With us: 20 years 8 months
Location: Montreal

Re: Pictures from Celestia

Post #98by Cham » 20.03.2013, 10:37

lodgy wrote:You're saying that this is science fiction !
OHHHH the ugly boy... :(

So this is not the good topic to deliver all your photos ?

After reading this kind of stupid comments, I'm now asking myself why should I continue to publish anything on this lame forum. :roll:
Why should I give any addons to disrespectful idiots like you ? So you don't like 3D nebulae ? Okay no problem, just forget about them.

I have enough of this moronic board. I'm leaving.
"Well! I've often seen a cat without a grin", thought Alice; "but a grin without a cat! It's the most curious thing I ever saw in all my life!"

Avatar
Fenerit M
Posts: 1880
Joined: 26.03.2007
Age: 17
With us: 17 years 6 months
Location: Thyrrenian sea

Re: Pictures from Celestia

Post #99by Fenerit » 20.03.2013, 14:52

lodgy wrote:You're saying that this is science fiction !
OHHHH the ugly boy... :(

So this is not the good topic to deliver all your photos ?
You had to choose this one: "Re: Custom Science-Fiction Pictures from Celestia" at :
http://www.celestiaproject.net/forum/viewtopic ... 1e9467536e

From Wiki (sci-fi search):
The settings for science fiction are often contrary to consensus reality, but most science fiction relies on a considerable degree of suspension of disbelief, which is facilitated in the reader's mind by potential scientific explanations or solutions to various fictional elements

There is no "suspension of disbelief" in believing that within NGC404 there can be several nebulae generated through the usual scientific ways with which they are generated, having proofs that nebulae exists within other galaxies now. On the other hand, there is no proof that faster-than-light ST/SW vessels exists now; thus there is the "suspension of disbelief" for what concern their existence "long time ago, in a far far away galaxy". Cham's works on sprites is a straightforward approach to get 3D nebuale as closest as possible to their real shape and Shatters.net is not Facebook, Twitter or similar devices for children mass-brain deseases.
Never at rest.
Massimo

Avatar
Fenerit M
Posts: 1880
Joined: 26.03.2007
Age: 17
With us: 17 years 6 months
Location: Thyrrenian sea

Re: Pictures from Celestia

Post #100by Fenerit » 20.03.2013, 18:07

argelesmer wrote:Why not distribute cocaine saying it is sugar powder...

Sorry, I do not agree. If the potential matter for the possibly existence of nebulae within NGC-404 were independent from its form, it should be constituted by gas/dust components like our nebulae; being its form, by the way, just the part that you considers fictional even though you must admit that sugar and coca matches their form but not their matter. Could you tell me what matter and form matches an unexistent sci-fi object aside the book's paper or the movie's film?
Never at rest.
Massimo


Return to “Celestia Users”