fsgregs wrote:Fridger:
Your skill in coloring Titan using more detailed surface layers is obviously excellent. I will defer to your effort over mine. I am ready to package and zip up my most recent Educational Activity, which covers the planetary spacecraft, including Huygens. I want to include the latest texture of both Titan and its clouds, and of course, Jestr's great Huygens descent add-on.
When will your new textures for Titan's surface, its clouds, and its haze be available for download? Also, will the cloud layer have any transparency, as you once suspected it might?
Frank
Frank,
glad you liked the modifications above. I can see two factors that make a precise schedule difficult:
1) The texture I used above is largely based on an upgrade of my default Celestia texture as recently done by Steve Albers. He had asked my permission for using my texture and added in the latest hires projections from the Titan flyby. So I guess before you package things, his consensus should also be obtained.
2) The coloration I did above was just a 5 minute affair which also means that I am usually not satisfied with such "quick shots"... (GIMP2 has complete, ready to use color mapping macros). Before I release a "next-generation" default Celestia texture of Titan, I want to see more official surface color images and precise statements about the filtering etc that has been used.
On the other hand, as long as Steve is 'd'accord', you are always welcome to use my work from a preliminary stage.
It would also be really nice to have /all/ available hires shots of titan incorporated into the texture before releasing it...
We do have clear photographic evidence that in /visual/ light and seen from a distance, Titan's cloud cover is practically not transparent. So for now, the most consistent approach within Celestia seems to be un-transparent clouds along with a detailed surface texture that becomes visible after toggling the I-key. The conceptional problem remains (as detailed higher up), that the true visible surface colors require in principle the presence of the haze (that acts as a complex color filter)!
Bye Fridger