by Cousin Ricky » Thu Jun 11, 2015 4:55 am
BMAONE23 wrote:Cousin Ricky wrote:If this is intended to show what a flyover would look like, then why the vertical exaggeration, and why the contrived star field? In fact, this is not what a flyover would look like.
Other than artistic purposes and awe factor, which work, the star field is likely there because it is expected to be visible in the darkness of space. It has been an issue here numerous times that space images don't show stars "nice image of the ISS but where are the stars".
My question remains. If it really is intended to show what it would look like, then how is it legitimate to cater to people's misconceptions of what things look like in space? If they just wanted to make an artistic piece based on real data, or even exaggerate for visualization purposes, that's perfectly fine; but then don't say that this is what it would look like.
The answer may be in the video itself. No where on the video, the YouTube page, or the JPL site does it say that it was intended to give a realistic impression, so I must conclude that this was just editorializing done by the APOD commentator.
BMAONE23 wrote:As far as the galactic plane issue goes, nothing is stated in the write up regarding this being an equatorial orbit. Orbits can be around any axis even one that coincides with the galactic plane.
I wasn't the one who brought up the galactic plane. Since there is no indication (other than the (possibly spurious) APOD description) that the video was intended to give a realistic impression, I must conclude that the orientation of the star field is irrelevant.
[quote="BMAONE23"][quote="Cousin Ricky"]If this is intended to show what a flyover would look like, then why the vertical exaggeration, and why the contrived star field? In fact, this is [i]not[/i] what a flyover would look like.[/quote]
Other than artistic purposes and awe factor, which work, the star field is likely there because it is expected to be visible in the darkness of space. It has been an issue here numerous times that space images don't show stars "nice image of the ISS but where are the stars".[/quote]
My question remains. If it really is intended to show what it would look like, then how is it legitimate to cater to people's misconceptions of what things look like in space? If they just wanted to make an artistic piece based on real data, or even exaggerate for visualization purposes, that's perfectly fine; but then don't say that this is what it would look like.
The answer may be in the video itself. No where on the video, the YouTube page, or the JPL site does it say that it was intended to give a realistic impression, so I must conclude that this was just editorializing done by the APOD commentator.
[quote="BMAONE23"]As far as the galactic plane issue goes, nothing is stated in the write up regarding this being an equatorial orbit. Orbits can be around any axis even one that coincides with the galactic plane.[/quote]
I wasn't the one who brought up the galactic plane. Since there is no indication (other than the (possibly spurious) APOD description) that the video was intended to give a realistic impression, I must conclude that the orientation of the star field is irrelevant.