An error in extrasolar.stc

General discussion about Celestia that doesn't fit into other forums.
Avatar
Topic author
Cham M
Posts: 4324
Joined: 14.01.2004
Age: 60
With us: 20 years 10 months
Location: Montreal

An error in extrasolar.stc

Post #1by Cham » 12.03.2007, 01:36

I've found something weird, in the extrasolar.stc file. There's a white dwarf with a radius of ... 4236 Sol ! The exoplanet orbiting it is VERY close to the star :

Image

I think the absMag is wrong.
"Well! I've often seen a cat without a grin", thought Alice; "but a grin without a cat! It's the most curious thing I ever saw in all my life!"

Avatar
Topic author
Cham M
Posts: 4324
Joined: 14.01.2004
Age: 60
With us: 20 years 10 months
Location: Montreal

Post #2by Cham » 12.03.2007, 01:46

Hmmm, I'm not sure anymore it's an error in the stc file. May be a conflict with something else. I'll have to investigate. Sorry.
"Well! I've often seen a cat without a grin", thought Alice; "but a grin without a cat! It's the most curious thing I ever saw in all my life!"

Avatar
Topic author
Cham M
Posts: 4324
Joined: 14.01.2004
Age: 60
With us: 20 years 10 months
Location: Montreal

Post #3by Cham » 12.03.2007, 02:22

There's definitely something terribly wrong.

I desactivated ALL my extras (placing the entire folder somewhere else on the HD), and the problem is still there.

If I change the SpectralType "D" to SpectralType "WD", in the extrasolar.stc, I get a tiny white dwarf of about 600 km radius !!

Please, is someone else can confirm this with the latest CVS Celestia ?

I recall it's about the WD J1623-266/PSR 1620-26 B/PSR B1620-26 B/PSR J1623-2631 B. It's a white dwarf orbiting a pulsar, and there's an exoplanet orbiting around them.
"Well! I've often seen a cat without a grin", thought Alice; "but a grin without a cat! It's the most curious thing I ever saw in all my life!"

ElChristou
Developer
Posts: 3776
Joined: 04.02.2005
With us: 19 years 9 months

Post #4by ElChristou » 12.03.2007, 02:36

I confirm the issue...
Image

Avatar
Topic author
Cham M
Posts: 4324
Joined: 14.01.2004
Age: 60
With us: 20 years 10 months
Location: Montreal

Post #5by Cham » 12.03.2007, 02:37

ElChristou wrote:I confirm the issue...


!! OMG !!
"Well! I've often seen a cat without a grin", thought Alice; "but a grin without a cat! It's the most curious thing I ever saw in all my life!"

Johaen
Posts: 341
Joined: 14.01.2006
With us: 18 years 10 months
Location: IL, USA

Post #6by Johaen » 12.03.2007, 03:27

I can confirm that it's not an issue with (atleast my install of) Celestia 1.5.0pre2.

Image

A quick check of extrasolar.ssc shows:

Code: Select all

"WD J1623-266:PSR 1620-26 B:PSR B1620-26 B:PSR J1623-2631 B"
{
   ...
   SpectralType "D"  # white dwarf
   ...
}
AMD Athlon X2 4400+; 2GB OCZ Platinum RAM; 320GB SATA HDD; NVidia EVGA GeForce 7900GT KO, PCI-e, 512MB, ForceWare ver. 163.71; Razer Barracuda AC-1 7.1 Gaming Soundcard; Abit AN8 32X motherboard; 600 watt Kingwin Mach1 PSU; Windows XP Media Center SP2;

revent
Posts: 80
Joined: 15.11.2003
Age: 47
With us: 21 years
Location: Springfield, MO, USA

Post #7by revent » 12.03.2007, 04:08

This 1996 article http://www.journals.uchicago.edu/ApJ/journal/issues/ApJL/v473n2/5453/sc0.html gives a V of 21.3 for the white dwarf.

chris
Site Admin
Posts: 4211
Joined: 28.01.2002
With us: 22 years 10 months
Location: Seattle, Washington, USA

Post #8by chris » 12.03.2007, 06:24

It's a bug that I introduced when I added bolometric corrections for white dwarf magnitudes. The temperature of a white dwarf with an unspecified temperature code was getting set to a nonsense value. I've committed the one-line fix to CVS, and the calculated radius of PSR 1620-26 B is now a much more reasonable value. Cham, thank you for reporting this bug.

--Chris

Avatar
Topic author
Cham M
Posts: 4324
Joined: 14.01.2004
Age: 60
With us: 20 years 10 months
Location: Montreal

Post #9by Cham » 12.03.2007, 06:29

Thanks Chris,
"Well! I've often seen a cat without a grin", thought Alice; "but a grin without a cat! It's the most curious thing I ever saw in all my life!"

granthutchison
Developer
Posts: 1863
Joined: 21.11.2002
With us: 22 years

Post #10by granthutchison » 12.03.2007, 21:39

Cham PMed me about this while he thought there was a problem with the stc itself.
The AbsMag for this object was just tweaked in order to come up with a reasonable radius under Celestia's previous code (which we know tends to produce excessively small white dwarfs because of the absent bolometric correction).
It'll probably need retweaked under the new code.

Grant

granthutchison
Developer
Posts: 1863
Joined: 21.11.2002
With us: 22 years

Post #11by granthutchison » 12.03.2007, 22:01

Cham wrote:If I change the SpectralType "D" to SpectralType "WD", in the extrasolar.stc, I get a tiny white dwarf of about 600 km radius !!
IIRC, adding the initial W makes Celestia parse the object as a Wolf-Rayet star, which is why you get the sudden change in radius ...

Grant

chris
Site Admin
Posts: 4211
Joined: 28.01.2002
With us: 22 years 10 months
Location: Seattle, Washington, USA

Post #12by chris » 12.03.2007, 22:34

granthutchison wrote:
Cham wrote:If I change the SpectralType "D" to SpectralType "WD", in the extrasolar.stc, I get a tiny white dwarf of about 600 km radius !!
IIRC, adding the initial W makes Celestia parse the object as a Wolf-Rayet star, which is why you get the sudden change in radius ...


I'm guessing that the star is too far away (12400 ly) to be detected optically, forcing us to invent a plausible magnitude. I could modify Celestia to automatically compute the brightness from the radius and temperature when a magnitude isn't specified, but PSR 1620-26B seems like a pretty rare case.

--Chris

revent
Posts: 80
Joined: 15.11.2003
Age: 47
With us: 21 years
Location: Springfield, MO, USA

Post #13by revent » 14.03.2007, 07:58

chris wrote:I'm guessing that the star is too far away (12400 ly) to be detected optically, forcing us to invent a plausible magnitude. I could modify Celestia to automatically compute the brightness from the radius and temperature when a magnitude isn't specified, but PSR 1620-26B seems like a pretty rare case.


The article link I posted earlier is from an optical separation of the system. It was done with a 3.5m active optics telescope, though. Wish I had one of those in my backyard. :)

Avatar
Hungry4info
Posts: 1133
Joined: 11.09.2005
With us: 19 years 2 months
Location: Indiana, United States

Post #14by Hungry4info » 14.03.2007, 22:34

(off topic) The image you provided shows the PSR B1620-26 system inside the M4 Cluster, or at least within a dense star area. In my version of Celestia, the cluster is not given. Are the stars based on real data? If so, where can I obtain an STC for them?
Current Setup:
Windows 7 64 bit. Celestia 1.6.0.
AMD Athlon Processor, 1.6 Ghz, 3 Gb RAM
ATI Radeon HD 3200 Graphics

Avatar
Topic author
Cham M
Posts: 4324
Joined: 14.01.2004
Age: 60
With us: 20 years 10 months
Location: Montreal

Post #15by Cham » 14.03.2007, 23:50

Hungry4info wrote:(off topic) The image you provided shows the PSR B1620-26 system inside the M4 Cluster, or at least within a dense star area. In my version of Celestia, the cluster is not given. Are the stars based on real data? If so, where can I obtain an STC for them?


The stars in M4 are all fakes. They comes from Rassilon M4 addon, who made it using one of his generators.
"Well! I've often seen a cat without a grin", thought Alice; "but a grin without a cat! It's the most curious thing I ever saw in all my life!"


Return to “Celestia Users”