Hi,
I downloaded celestia quite a few months ago, but only seriously into it for the past few days. While traversing the universe at unimaginably high speeds, something struck me ...relativity. Instead viewing blackness at 1^10 ly/s how about viewing relativistic effect at speed near c? This thought may have come up earlier to any other user, which I may not be aware of. I am not a computer expert...so I leave this challenge to all those who are.
P.S: Here is a site that has a software featuring all the relativistic effects:-
http://www.tat.physik.uni-tuebingen.de/ ~weiskopf/vr/software.html
which unfortunately didn't work on my machine
c is the limit!
You might want to take a look at Marc's work on Celestia...From what I understand he might be implementing some of this in Celestia at some point with his Mostly Harmless project...
http://mostlyharmless.sourceforge.net/index.htm
http://mostlyharmless.sourceforge.net/index.htm
I'm trying to teach the cavemen how to play scrabble, its uphill work. The only word they know is Uhh and they dont know how to spell it!
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Re: c is the limit!
orion wrote:Hi,
I downloaded celestia quite a few months ago, but only seriously into it for the past few days. While traversing the universe at unimaginably high speeds, something struck me :idea: ...relativity. Instead viewing blackness at 1^10 ly/s how about viewing relativistic effect at speed near c? This thought may have come up earlier to any other user, which I may not be aware of. I am not a computer expert...so I leave this challenge to all those who are.
P.S: Here is a site that has a software featuring all the relativistic effects:-
http://www.tat.physik.uni-tuebingen.de/ ~weiskopf/vr/software.html
which unfortunately didn't work on my machine :(
Interesting idea! Relativistic effects should also be noticable when hovering near massive gravitational bodies... (of course, the user should be able to disable relativistic effects if he wants)