by wilddouglascounty » Sun Aug 04, 2024 10:31 pm
Does anyone know of anyone who has made a volumetric depiction of the visible night sky? I have looked for years for such a depiction, but in vain. There are many, many depictions of our stellar neighborhood from an external, 3D position, zooming in like an interstellar ship from a distance away the sun but never from the perspective of someone on the ground looking up at the sky.
Such a volumetric depiction of the sky we look up at with our naked eye would require a gigantic exaggeration of parallax so that nearby stars would move more than the stars further away when you moved your head from side to side, but I think such a depiction of the sky would be fascinating and allow us to appreciate the night sky in a whole new way. If, instead of the all of the stars being fixed on the same celestial dome, our visible night sky could have that dome expanded out to the band of stars of the Milky Way, then all the stars closer than that could be seen in a perceivable 3D volumetric space, so you could explore the constellations in a whole new way. You could not only see that Rigel is further away than Betelgeuse by wiggling Orion, you could explore the which parts of the sky seem empty compared to other areas, giving you a real sense of the 3D volume of space we are surrounded by.
Of course I'm talking about visible stars only, just to give an appreciation for the volumes of space that you see when you walk outside and look up. It would be great to have the option of including the many, many red dwarfs and other fainter stellar objects that share our neighborhood as well if you wanted to "see" how they fit in, too. Anyone know of such a resource? And if not, anyone want to do that for us?
Does anyone know of anyone who has made a volumetric depiction of the visible night sky? I have looked for years for such a depiction, but in vain. There are many, many depictions of our stellar neighborhood from an external, 3D position, zooming in like an interstellar ship from a distance away the sun but never from the perspective of someone on the ground looking up at the sky.
Such a volumetric depiction of the sky we look up at with our naked eye would require a gigantic exaggeration of parallax so that nearby stars would move more than the stars further away when you moved your head from side to side, but I think such a depiction of the sky would be fascinating and allow us to appreciate the night sky in a whole new way. If, instead of the all of the stars being fixed on the same celestial dome, our visible night sky could have that dome expanded out to the band of stars of the Milky Way, then all the stars closer than that could be seen in a perceivable 3D volumetric space, so you could explore the constellations in a whole new way. You could not only see that Rigel is further away than Betelgeuse by wiggling Orion, you could explore the which parts of the sky seem empty compared to other areas, giving you a real sense of the 3D volume of space we are surrounded by.
Of course I'm talking about visible stars only, just to give an appreciation for the volumes of space that you see when you walk outside and look up. It would be great to have the option of including the many, many red dwarfs and other fainter stellar objects that share our neighborhood as well if you wanted to "see" how they fit in, too. Anyone know of such a resource? And if not, anyone want to do that for us?