POV-Ray : Newsgroups : povray.binaries.animations : part b Server Time
20 Jul 2024 13:11:55 EDT (-0400)
  part b (Message 1 to 8 of 8)  
From: Matt Giwer
Subject: part b
Date: 21 Dec 2000 20:24:12
Message: <3A42AD2B.44C963DE@ij.net>
another little something

-- 
Life's too short and death's too long
to take this all that seriously. 
	-- The Iron Webmaster, 372


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From: Marc van den Dikkenberg
Subject: Re: part b
Date: 22 Dec 2000 00:04:23
Message: <H+BCOrpdVzdGbrOwoL1gJnnOoy8Y@4ax.com>
On Thu, 21 Dec 2000 20:23:55 -0500, Matt Giwer <jul### [at] ijnet> wrote:

>	another little something

Not bad, but... The shadow the spaceship projects on the planet is about
the size of half a continent...

The ship is bigger than the moon?
-- 
Marc van den Dikkenberg
--
The PowerBasic Archives -- http://www.xs4all.nl/~excel/pb.html
All Basic Code Archives -- http://come.to/abcpackets


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From: Matt Giwer
Subject: Re: part b
Date: 22 Dec 2000 00:19:32
Message: <3A42E464.8514C817@ij.net>
Marc van den Dikkenberg wrote:
> 
> On Thu, 21 Dec 2000 20:23:55 -0500, Matt Giwer <jul### [at] ijnet> wrote:
> 
> >       another little something
> 
> Not bad, but... The shadow the spaceship projects on the planet is about
> the size of half a continent...

	The shadows of both are to be seen in a full animation too large for
the group limits. 

> The ship is bigger than the moon?

	About 1/4 the size. That is coming in a later scene when the moon is
destroyed. 

-- 
When you raid a cathouse you take 
the piano player too. 
	-- The Iron Webmaster, 410


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From: Marc van den Dikkenberg
Subject: Re: part b
Date: 22 Dec 2000 21:27:02
Message: <9AxEOiQySc3PULQiNyg78zk0xIga@4ax.com>
On Fri, 22 Dec 2000 00:19:32 -0500, Matt Giwer <jul### [at] ijnet> wrote:

>> The ship is bigger than the moon?
>
>	About 1/4 the size. That is coming in a later scene when the moon is
>destroyed. 

Okay, that would explain some things -- by the -look- of the spaceship I
would have imagined it be be very small, like a one-person fighter
-- 
Marc van den Dikkenberg
--
The PowerBasic Archives -- http://www.xs4all.nl/~excel/pb.html
All Basic Code Archives -- http://come.to/abcpackets


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From: KalleK
Subject: Re: part b
Date: 23 Dec 2000 04:17:54
Message: <3a446dc2@news.povray.org>
Hi!

> About 1/4 the size. That is coming in a later scene when the moon is
> destroyed.

If it is that big and rotates one time per two second, the "forces of
rotation" (don't know the english word) will pull it apart. Would somebody
calculate the acceleration in the outer regions of that ship?
Just thinking humanlimited - But who knows which physical laws work for that
alien spaceship.

And me thinks the shadow on that earth is a nice piece. It makes that
animation interesting

cukk


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From: Matt Giwer
Subject: Re: part b
Date: 23 Dec 2000 22:57:43
Message: <3A457437.8C0CCD80@ij.net>
KalleK wrote:

> Hi!

> > About 1/4 the size. That is coming in a later scene when the moon is
> > destroyed.

> If it is that big and rotates one time per two second, 

	Once per 36 frames actually. 

> the "forces of
> rotation" (don't know the english word) will pull it apart. Would somebody
> calculate the acceleration in the outer regions of that ship?

	I don't think it is exceeding c. 

> Just thinking humanlimited - But who knows which physical laws work for that
> alien spaceship.

	Mere gravity hasn't bothered SciFi films since they were first made. ;) 

> And me thinks the shadow on that earth is a nice piece. It makes that
> animation interesting

	Thanks for that observation. I was on the verge of making my sun
shadowless. 

-- 
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Paid for by the Kelly2000 campaign committee
	-- The Iron Webmaster, 19


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From: Bob H 
Subject: Re: part b
Date: 25 Dec 2000 02:30:13
Message: <3a46f785$1@news.povray.org>
"Matt Giwer" <jul### [at] ijnet> wrote in message news:3A457437.8C0CCD80@ij.net...
> KalleK wrote:
>
> > If it is that big and rotates one time per two second,
>
> Once per 36 frames actually.
>
> > the "forces of
> > rotation" (don't know the english word) will pull it apart. Would somebody
> > calculate the acceleration in the outer regions of that ship?
>
> I don't think it is exceeding c.

Something like 1000 miles per second is my guess for the lobed ship, and maybe
2000 mps for the smaller(?) craft.  Plenty g-force on those outer parts anyway.
:-)

Bob H.


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From: Matt Giwer
Subject: Re: part b
Date: 25 Dec 2000 04:05:54
Message: <3A470DF0.18F5CF63@ij.net>
"Bob H." wrote:
> 
> "Matt Giwer" <jul### [at] ijnet> wrote in message news:3A457437.8C0CCD80@ij.net...
> > KalleK wrote:
> >
> > > If it is that big and rotates one time per two second,
> >
> > Once per 36 frames actually.
> >
> > > the "forces of
> > > rotation" (don't know the english word) will pull it apart. Would somebody
> > > calculate the acceleration in the outer regions of that ship?
> >
> > I don't think it is exceeding c.
> 
> Something like 1000 miles per second is my guess for the lobed ship, and maybe
> 2000 mps for the smaller(?) craft.  Plenty g-force on those outer parts anyway.
> :-)

	Well ... yes! They are from Hal Clement's Mission of Gravity World. Or
maybe whoseit's Neutron Star world. 

	
Vector normal acceleration! Can't leave home without it. 

-- 
Even paranoids have enemies. 
Only paranoids create them. 
	-- The Iron Webmaster, 119


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