A Snapshot of the Plot of the Inner Solar System 30
BawbBitchen writes "The BBC is running an interesting story about
a bunch of Astronomers who have produced a snapshot of the Solar System as
of 26 July 2002. Here is the
full image and here is a
5.1MB animated GIF (each frame is 961 x 961 pixels) of the map. The credits
say it was generated on an OpenVMS system using the PGPLOT graphics library
and the animation was done on a RISC OS 4.03 system."
Too much noise (Score:1)
Re:Too much noise (Score:3, Interesting)
Heck no. Have you noticed that Jupiter's lagrange points are fairly populated. I never knew that before, and I took 3 years of astrophysics at the university level. Just goes to show, you learn something new every day.
Bork!
Re:Too much noise (Score:2)
Look out! (Score:1)
Never mind the NEOs, check out the asteroid belt! (Score:5, Interesting)
It's icy asteroids outside the icing point of the sun- at that distance water is in the form of ice and sublimes only over enormous timescales.
Water is an okish fuel for rockets- the ISP of steam is about 190 seconds, just under half the thrust of the space shuttle main engines, even if you don't split it into hydrogen and oxygen.
Basically, if you can reach that, the whole solar system is open to you- so much fuel you wouldn't know which way to go first...
Re:Never mind the NEOs, check out the asteroid bel (Score:2)
I'm convinced these asteroids (and the ones that come closer) are our key to future development off planet. We should be putting some serious research into these little rocks first, the big rocks (planets) less so.
Just my opinion, of course.
misleading (Score:4, Informative)
When you look at the plots it looks like the whole space is filled. This is not even close to representing the true picture since the spacial scales are so large, the actual masses are really smaller than pinpoints. The media is putting out misleading pictures without giving any explanation about the scale, and it looks like we are sitting inside a virtual fog bank of asteroids.
Re:misleading (Score:5, Insightful)
Would you be happier if they put a little sticker on the picture saying "object size is not to scale"?
They're constrained by the fact that we actually have to be able to _see_ objects on the plot, and be able to pick out the more important objects (like planets) from the hordes of smaller objects sprinkled about the plot.
Looks like a decent plot to me.
Re:misleading (Score:2, Insightful)
It can't? (Score:2)
Re:misleading (Score:2)
Re:misleading (Score:2)
Wow (Score:1)
Here's another version (Score:3, Informative)
Gives the usual detailed information.
It's fantastic... (Score:1)
3D (Score:1)
Asteroid Belt... (Score:1)
Re:Asteroid Belt... (Score:2)
Anthropically misleading? (Score:1)
Re:Anthropically misleading? (Score:2)
Look out! The sky is falling! (Score:1)
map? (Score:1)
jumpy (Score:1)
Sigh, a 2D universe? (Score:1)
If they can track, plot and draw a 2D image of the solar system, that seems to me that they have the data on these objects to plot them in 3D.
Why didn't they create a 3D representation?
Comet cycles? (Score:1)
On the Outer Solar System Graph it appears that the comets move in some sort of cyclic pattern (meaning that they seem to converge and then disperse in tune). Is this accurate? Are there any good links to explain theories about this?
Gosh I'm woefully ignorant about our neighborhood!
Plot of the inner solar system (Score:2)
I always knew Venus was up to no good, but little did I realise that Mars, Earth, Mercury were in on it. Just what sinister plot does the inner solar system have ?
or:
"Plot of the inner solar system"
Those who criticize the plot of the inner solar system should realize that the plot itself takes a backseat to the special effects.
graspee