Boomerang
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Topic authoreburacum45
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Boomerang
I thought I'd try my hand at a 3d nebula; here is the results so far.
The Boomerang Nebula is supposedly the coldest place in the universe yet found outside of the laboratory;
here is an APOD of the object
http://antwrp.gsfc.nasa.gov/apod/ap030220.html
the cooling is due to expanding gases, apparently.
My model so far- about 5 megs- by golly these 3d models get big quick
Now if you go round this object it starts looking like other celestial objects in the sky-
here is a planetary nebula
here it looks like the Helix nebula
this kind of looks like Eta Carina
Another view
Please ignore the radius shown onscreen, which is just the size of the smallest, innermost component. The model will be about 2 light years long - when it is finished.
The Boomerang Nebula is supposedly the coldest place in the universe yet found outside of the laboratory;
here is an APOD of the object
http://antwrp.gsfc.nasa.gov/apod/ap030220.html
the cooling is due to expanding gases, apparently.
My model so far- about 5 megs- by golly these 3d models get big quick
Now if you go round this object it starts looking like other celestial objects in the sky-
here is a planetary nebula
here it looks like the Helix nebula
this kind of looks like Eta Carina
Another view
Please ignore the radius shown onscreen, which is just the size of the smallest, innermost component. The model will be about 2 light years long - when it is finished.
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- Developer
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Very pretty. I really like these 3D nebulas. They look much more real in a 3D enviroment then the flat ones.
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Wow , your multi-layered model seem to be very impressive from each side !
I'm very excited to know how you managed to build such a model !
When will it be downloadable ?
I can't wait !!
JLL
I'm very excited to know how you managed to build such a model !
When will it be downloadable ?
I can't wait !!
JLL
AMD Ath1800+ 512mb : Nvidia GeForce6200 AGP 256mb
WinXPPro:FS1280x1024x32:
Celestia 1.4.1:Earth 4Kdds:Clouds 4Kdds:Night 4Kdds:Moon 4kdds:Galaxy ON
WinXPPro:FS1280x1024x32:
Celestia 1.4.1:Earth 4Kdds:Clouds 4Kdds:Night 4Kdds:Moon 4kdds:Galaxy ON
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Topic authoreburacum45
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Oh dear, I have just counted- there are about forty layers in the model.
But only one texture!
My strategy was to make a small cloudy patch on a .png texture, then apply it to lots of shapes which I pieced together to make a wasp-waisted structure. So it has lots of layers, but they are all the same texture.
If I were to make a different type of nebula a different strategy would be required, using several textures.
But only one texture!
My strategy was to make a small cloudy patch on a .png texture, then apply it to lots of shapes which I pieced together to make a wasp-waisted structure. So it has lots of layers, but they are all the same texture.
If I were to make a different type of nebula a different strategy would be required, using several textures.
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Topic authoreburacum45
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Not sure why you want to see some planetary remnants inside the nebula, but here they are,
actually making this image made my computer crash, so it is obviously pushing the boundaries of my set-up.
To Buggs;
the texture is fairly transparent, but stacking it up, flipping and rotating it the nebula appears quite thick in places.
actually making this image made my computer crash, so it is obviously pushing the boundaries of my set-up.
To Buggs;
the texture is fairly transparent, but stacking it up, flipping and rotating it the nebula appears quite thick in places.
eburacum45 wrote:Oh dear, I have just counted- there are about forty layers in the model.
But only one texture!
My strategy was to make a small cloudy patch on a .png texture, then apply it to lots of shapes which I pieced together to make a wasp-waisted structure. So it has lots of layers, but they are all the same texture.
If I were to make a different type of nebula a different strategy would be required, using several textures.
Regarding the 40 layers and the size of the file. You might try deleting half the layers that would reduce the file size. Check out the results you might be supprised that there is not that much difference. Just a thought. You might even get by with fewer that 20 just have to play with it.
Don
Don't know anything
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Topic authoreburacum45
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Well I tried making the model with fewer layers, but it lacked the fullness of the forty-layer model- so I tried another trick- I made several .dsc declarations for the same model, each one a slightly diferent size and oriented at a slightly different angle. This made the resulting model thich and full-seeming.
Here is the result.
Here is the result.
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I have had some success with this method as well eburacum. I have also toyed with changing the oblateness of models. When using one texture and one model with different sizes and oblateness it cuts down on load times. Do you have any flicker problems?
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WinXP Pro SP2
Asus A7N8X-E Deluxe
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1 GB Crucial RAM
80 GB WD SATA drive
ATI AIW 9600XT 128M
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Topic authoreburacum45
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I don't notice a flicker with this model. I have (however) noticed a flicker on some of my spaceships.
One trick I like to use is to make the port and starboard lights and other similar lights with a semitransparent halo- this semitransparent halo flickers quite noticably. It almost looks like deliberate animation...
One trick I like to use is to make the port and starboard lights and other similar lights with a semitransparent halo- this semitransparent halo flickers quite noticably. It almost looks like deliberate animation...
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Topic authoreburacum45
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As we were talking about flicker with semitransparent meshes, here is a particularly strange example. I have been updating my model of the Bishop ring habitat concept; I decided to add a moving transparent cloud layer.
You can see an early version of the clouds moving here;
(movie)
http://www.orionsarm.com/movies/Movie_0001.wmv
and here is a more recent version of the model with better textures.
http://img66.imageshack.us/img66/9339/manaus1dj.jpg
but once you get inside the ring the clouds disappear altogether;
http://img66.imageshack.us/img66/7838/manaus38fl.jpg
It ia quite annoying, although it does allow you to look at the ring floor texture a bit closer. I have tried flipping normals and all the usual tricks.
You can see an early version of the clouds moving here;
(movie)
http://www.orionsarm.com/movies/Movie_0001.wmv
and here is a more recent version of the model with better textures.
http://img66.imageshack.us/img66/9339/manaus1dj.jpg
but once you get inside the ring the clouds disappear altogether;
http://img66.imageshack.us/img66/7838/manaus38fl.jpg
It ia quite annoying, although it does allow you to look at the ring floor texture a bit closer. I have tried flipping normals and all the usual tricks.
- Chuft-Captain
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eburacum45 wrote:...but once you get inside the ring the clouds disappear altogether;
http://img66.imageshack.us/img66/7838/manaus38fl.jpg
It ia quite annoying, although it does allow you to look at the ring floor texture a bit closer. I have tried flipping normals and all the usual tricks.
eburacum45,
I think I experience the same problem when I put clouds inside my O'Neill Habitat. From certain angles the clouds just disappear. For example in the case of the video "Golden Gate in Habitat" at http://traitorsclaw.sitesled.com/videos.html you can see the rotating clouds perfectly OK from the viewing position high on the endcap, but from some positions they will just disappear.
My theory is that this may have something to do with the well known depth-sorting problems or disappearing models problems documented in other threads, as it seems to exhibit some of the same symptoms.
Just speculating. I know that's probably not much help, but that's my theory for what it's worth.
Maybe, just maybe, these problems willl disappear with Chris's current work on enhancements to cloud rendering.
"Is a planetary surface the right place for an expanding technological civilization?"
-- Gerard K. O'Neill (1969)
CATALOG SYNTAX HIGHLIGHTING TOOLS LAGRANGE POINTS
-- Gerard K. O'Neill (1969)
CATALOG SYNTAX HIGHLIGHTING TOOLS LAGRANGE POINTS