Help! 24 Hours of All Sky Camera Footage
Help! 24 Hours of All Sky Camera Footage
Hello Everyone
I am an artist and I could really do with some help with a project: I am looking for 24 hours of all-sky camera footage.
• Would you have access to any such footage?
• Would you be able to put me in touch with someone with access to such footage?
• Can you point me in the direction of any online communities that may be able to help?
Although any footage would be a fantastic help, my task is to find simultaneous footage from 2 opposite points on the planet.
Any help at all would be greatly appreciated. Apologies if I am wasting your time, or if this request is inappropriate to this space.
Best Wishes
Paul Magee
paul@p000m0000.com
PS. Here are the details of the project: The idea behind "Planet Elsewhere" is to look in all directions out into the universe at once. Two all-sky cameras at antipodes point directly up towards the stars at precisely the same time. In its simplest form the video feeds would be presented together on a single screen. There may also be an object: I was thinking of back-projecting the video feeds onto the two separate hemispheres of a globe, effectively turning the rest of the universe into an object. There are images of the proposal at the following address: http://www.p000m0000.com/planet_elsewhere.html.
I am an artist and I could really do with some help with a project: I am looking for 24 hours of all-sky camera footage.
• Would you have access to any such footage?
• Would you be able to put me in touch with someone with access to such footage?
• Can you point me in the direction of any online communities that may be able to help?
Although any footage would be a fantastic help, my task is to find simultaneous footage from 2 opposite points on the planet.
Any help at all would be greatly appreciated. Apologies if I am wasting your time, or if this request is inappropriate to this space.
Best Wishes
Paul Magee
paul@p000m0000.com
PS. Here are the details of the project: The idea behind "Planet Elsewhere" is to look in all directions out into the universe at once. Two all-sky cameras at antipodes point directly up towards the stars at precisely the same time. In its simplest form the video feeds would be presented together on a single screen. There may also be an object: I was thinking of back-projecting the video feeds onto the two separate hemispheres of a globe, effectively turning the rest of the universe into an object. There are images of the proposal at the following address: http://www.p000m0000.com/planet_elsewhere.html.
- rstevenson
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Re: Help! 24 Hours of All Sky Camera Footage
I don't think an "all sky" camera view is possible with just two cameras -- you'll get a very imprecise and distorted image at the edges of their fish-eye views. Better would be four cameras, mounted at the points of an Earth-sized tetrahedron. (But one of them would be floating in the south Pacific, I think.) Even better would be four orbiting cameras!
Rob
Rob
Re: Help! 24 Hours of All Sky Camera Footage
Hi Rob
Thanks for your reply. Originally - 10 years ago - I was thinking of 6 cameras (that tetrahedron is more elegant). However, an astrophysics/engineer friend of mine convinced me that just 2 cameras would be sufficient. He argued that across the universe the height of the planet would be so insignificant as to be non-existent. Hated the idea at the time, now the thought that this hairline crack extends across the width of the universe - undermining the ambition of the whole thing - really appeals to me, and actually this is probably what makes it an artwork.
Very Best
Paul
PS Part of me would still prefer 4 cameras in orbit.
Thanks for your reply. Originally - 10 years ago - I was thinking of 6 cameras (that tetrahedron is more elegant). However, an astrophysics/engineer friend of mine convinced me that just 2 cameras would be sufficient. He argued that across the universe the height of the planet would be so insignificant as to be non-existent. Hated the idea at the time, now the thought that this hairline crack extends across the width of the universe - undermining the ambition of the whole thing - really appeals to me, and actually this is probably what makes it an artwork.
Very Best
Paul
PS Part of me would still prefer 4 cameras in orbit.
- Chris Peterson
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Re: Help! 24 Hours of All Sky Camera Footage
The thing to consider is that there is a massive asymmetry between the daytime and nighttime allsky views. Assuming it is clear, the night view essentially shows half of the visible Universe. There's a little distortion if you have a true horizon, but that effect is small. But the daytime imagery shows only a tiny fraction of the Universe, since in the daytime you are only seeing a hemisphere around you extending perhaps 50 miles in radius and 10 miles high. The Sun and Moon are the only celestial objects you can see beyond this.rstevenson wrote:I don't think an "all sky" camera view is possible with just two cameras -- you'll get a very imprecise and distorted image at the edges of their fish-eye views. Better would be four cameras, mounted at the points of an Earth-sized tetrahedron. (But one of them would be floating in the south Pacific, I think.) Even better would be four orbiting cameras!
But as long as you recognize this, and your goal is to portray things as they would appear from a single spot, two cameras on opposite sides of the Earth should really do a pretty good job. And since two cameras on opposite sides of the Earth are actually seeing two completely different skies, in a way that would be impossible for an observer even if the Earth were transparent, I think a better strategy would be to use a single camera and stitch together the daytime and nighttime parts onto the projection globe. That would be a truer representation than you'd get from cameras on opposite sides of the Earth.
Chris
*****************************************
Chris L Peterson
Cloudbait Observatory
https://www.cloudbait.com
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Chris L Peterson
Cloudbait Observatory
https://www.cloudbait.com
- rstevenson
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Re: Help! 24 Hours of All Sky Camera Footage
I love that thought -- a crack across the universe.p000m0000 wrote:...However, an astrophysics/engineer friend of mine convinced me that just 2 cameras would be sufficient. He argued that across the universe the height of the planet would be so insignificant as to be non-existent. Hated the idea at the time, now the thought that this hairline crack extends across the width of the universe - undermining the ambition of the whole thing - really appeals to me, and actually this is probably what makes it an artwork.
Rob
Re: Help! 24 Hours of All Sky Camera Footage
Hi Chris
With the video I am trying to look in all directions at the same time. Direction is the thing, looking up at everything else, that's the reasoning behind using antipodes. I hadn't considered the massive asymmetry that you talk about, but that really works for me: Over the 24 hour period one eye would gradually be occluded as the other cleared. It does change what the globe would do though.. I shall have to think about that.
Thank you
Paul
With the video I am trying to look in all directions at the same time. Direction is the thing, looking up at everything else, that's the reasoning behind using antipodes. I hadn't considered the massive asymmetry that you talk about, but that really works for me: Over the 24 hour period one eye would gradually be occluded as the other cleared. It does change what the globe would do though.. I shall have to think about that.
Thank you
Paul
Re: Help! 24 Hours of All Sky Camera Footage
Unfortunately season 5 of Dr.Who might have got there before merstevenson wrote:I love that thought -- a crack across the universe.p000m0000 wrote:...However, an astrophysics/engineer friend of mine convinced me that just 2 cameras would be sufficient. He argued that across the universe the height of the planet would be so insignificant as to be non-existent. Hated the idea at the time, now the thought that this hairline crack extends across the width of the universe - undermining the ambition of the whole thing - really appeals to me, and actually this is probably what makes it an artwork.
- rstevenson
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Re: Help! 24 Hours of All Sky Camera Footage
Well ... he is a Time Lord, after all. He can get there before anyone, even if he wasn't already there. Um, ... sort of.p000m0000 wrote:Unfortunately season 5 of Dr.Who might have got there before merstevenson wrote:I love that thought -- a crack across the universe.
Rob
Re: Help! 24 Hours of All Sky Camera Footage
HA! But wait.. is? Or was / will be? This gets messy pretty damn sharpish.rstevenson wrote:Well ... he is a Time Lord, after all. He can get there before anyone, even if he wasn't already there. Um, ... sort of.p000m0000 wrote:Unfortunately season 5 of Dr.Who might have got there before merstevenson wrote:I love that thought -- a crack across the universe.
Paul