Seb wrote:Thanks John, I forgot I could change the render path. Seems to do the trick, though there is still some flickering on a couple panels on the IIS.
this has been found to be due to a problem in the model of the ISS that comes with Celestia. It'll probably be fixed in the next major release, especially if someone with some modelling skills helps. In the meantime, you might want to consider downloading one of Andrew Farnaby's ISS Addons. They're hosted on bh's site at
http://www.berasan.com/celestia/iss.html.
On other point, Celestia seems to occasionally crash when hidden behind other windows.
I haven't had this problem. This suggests to me that it's most likely caused by bugs in the graphics drivers, not Celestia itself. If you haven't already, you should upgrade to the most recent drivers available from the manufacturer of your graphics card.
I just noticed that Celestia says Venus is 230k, is it not hotter than that?
You're probably thinking of Venus' surface temperature, which is extremely high. Don't forget that it's enhanced by the "greenhouse effect" caused by the deep atmosphere of mostly carbon dioxide. Celestia shows the "blackbody temperature." It's essentially the temperature that an object would have if it had no atmosphere.
Going of the subject even further, how do we know that our Galaxy (Milky way) looks like this? Looking at the positioning of all the stars they dont look like they would form part of this shape.
The distribution of many bright stars near the Sun does indeed seem to be slightly tilted relative to the plane of the real Milky Way galaxy. This is known as "Gould's Belt". See, for example,
http://ottawa.rasc.ca/observers/1999/an9912p8.html
The overall band of the milky way drawn by Celestia matches fairly well the band that can be seen on the sky. This is because the orientation of Celestia's 3D model was adjusted to agree closely with the plane of the galactic coordinate system used by astronomers.
The overall 3D shape of the model isn't particularly realistic, though. For example, it only has two arms, while it's been established that the Milky Way has at least four arms. (This same shape is used for all of the spiral galaxies that Celestia draws. It'd be nice if there were some way to modify its shape with more arms, etc) Also, the local irregularities that Celestia draws are random and have nothing to do with the irregularities present in the actual Milky Way.
Does this help clarify things somewhat?