Can you shake it loose from Earth coordinates? Then we could implement precession without disturbing the position of the Moon, which would also improve accuracy.chris wrote:Hmm . . . I think that the Moon's orbit could be more accurate.
Grant
t00fri wrote:I even have my small hometown entered as a location, so instead of entering the long lat coordinates, I can also just type its name. Then switching to alt-azimuth mode I can nicely change azimuth until I face whatever direction I want to face. Then I can make a screenshot of that view with or without the grid, constellation boundaries and asterisms switched on or off
keymaster14 wrote:t00fri wrote:I even have my small hometown entered as a location, so instead of entering the long lat coordinates, I can also just type its name. Then switching to alt-azimuth mode I can nicely change azimuth until I face whatever direction I want to face. Then I can make a screenshot of that view with or without the grid, constellation boundaries and asterisms switched on or off
I too have created a location for my town and a Caribbean island. But how do you switch to "alt-azimuth mode"? I'm running Celestia right now and can find no such option. Also nothing in the handbook about it. Are you referring to the "celestial grid" option in the "Render>View Options. . ." list?
Code: Select all
Windows:
CTRL F => Alt-azimuth mode (toggle)
CTRL G => Goto surface of selected body
Linux:
Alt F => Alt-azimuth ,ode (toggle)
Alt G => Goto surface of selected body
granthutchison wrote:Can you shake it loose from Earth coordinates? Then we could implement precession without disturbing the position of the Moon, which would also improve accuracy.chris wrote:Hmm . . . I think that the Moon's orbit could be more accurate.
Grant
chris wrote:Which version are you using?
ScottGant wrote:Also, there are a TON of deep sky objects in Starry Night that Celestia just doesn't have. They're automatically there in Starry Night, I don't have to download a picture of a galaxy, then put that pic in a special folder, then the object file in another folder, then put the blah blah blah blah. I just open Starry Night and it's right there. BANG.
The Milky Way looks real in Starry Night...in Celestia it looks like a bad rendering of computer clouds. I don't know about you, but when I look up at the Milky Way, it doesn't look anything like the view in Celestia.
ElPelado wrote:which Starry Night do you have? In the one I have, i have only the 110 Messier deep sky objects. I dont have the ngc catalog for example. so what deep sky obects are you talking about?
looks real? how do you do to make it look real? i only see a grey "thing". what do you see?
I use Starry Night Pro, version 4.0.5x