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Work progress and public beta test - 0.9.7.4
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| parameciumkid | Date: Friday, 06.11.2015, 05:20 | Message # 706 |
 Explorer
Group: Users
United States
Messages: 277
Status: Offline
| Yes we do. But they've got nothing on Olympus Mons, now do they? ;P
Intel HD Graphics 4000 ;P
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| ZatSolo | Date: Friday, 06.11.2015, 07:36 | Message # 707 |
 Space Pilot
Group: Users
Italy
Messages: 111
Status: Offline
| Quote JackDole (  ) Have you changed anything in your installation? For me this is planet a Oceania.
Yes, in universe.cfg I've changed a parameter.
ProbOceania 0.50 // Oceania -> Terra probability (original is 1.0 - in 0.970 was 0.5)
In versions 0.9.6.2 and 0.9.7.0 "ProbOceania" was "0.50", so I kept the same value.
Edited by ZatSolo - Friday, 06.11.2015, 07:38 |
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| JackDole | Date: Friday, 06.11.2015, 08:03 | Message # 708 |
 Star Engineer
Group: Local Moderators
Germany
Messages: 1742
Status: Offline
| Quote ZatSolo (  ) ProbOceania 0.50 // So it looks to me similar, not the same, I have a few more lakes. But this planet is nearly 2 billion years older than the earth, no wonder when the erosion has made him flat.
Don't forget to look here.
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| ZatSolo | Date: Friday, 06.11.2015, 08:11 | Message # 709 |
 Space Pilot
Group: Users
Italy
Messages: 111
Status: Offline
| Quote JackDole (  ) ... But this planet is nearly 2 billion years older than the earth, no wonder when the erosion has made him flat
Jokes aside, it would be interesting to have some clarification from SpaceEngineer, if/when possible
Edited by ZatSolo - Friday, 06.11.2015, 08:13 |
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| Kamil_Cader | Date: Friday, 06.11.2015, 11:18 | Message # 711 |
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Observer
Group: Users
Poland
Messages: 12
Status: Offline
| I don't understand what's happening on last 2 screenshots... Is it kind of singularity or what? Did You mean it is possiblle to cross the event horizon now? Anyway, amazing work as always(^^
Edit: After reading Your post few times... Its a view from black hole's "surface", isn't it?
Edited by Kamil_Cader - Friday, 06.11.2015, 11:27 |
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| Salvo | Date: Friday, 06.11.2015, 12:12 | Message # 712 |
 Star Engineer
Group: Local Moderators
Italy
Messages: 1400
Status: Offline
| OMG that's awesome! SpaceEngineer, will every black hole have the accretion disk or just some of them? Also are the accretion disks flat like planetary rings? :)
Quote Kamil_Cader (  ) I don't understand what's happening on last 2 screenshots... Is it kind of singularity or what?
You're right! It's the same effect you can see on this video at 4:50.
The universe is not required to be in perfect harmony with human ambition.
CPU: Intel Core i7 4770 GPU: ASUS Radeon R9 270 RAM: 8 GBs
(still don't know why everyone is doing this...)
Edited by Salvo - Friday, 06.11.2015, 12:15 |
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| second-ich | Date: Friday, 06.11.2015, 12:46 | Message # 713 |
 Space Pilot
Group: Users
Germany
Messages: 87
Status: Offline
| WOW, looks really incredible SpaceEngineer!! Isn't this a quasar? I always thought black holes with accretion disks are quasars but maybe I mix something up there.
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| RedRuin | Date: Friday, 06.11.2015, 14:30 | Message # 714 |
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Space Tourist
Group: Users
United States
Messages: 34
Status: Offline
| The beautification of Space Engine begins.
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| HarbingerDawn | Date: Friday, 06.11.2015, 14:31 | Message # 715 |
 Cosmic Curator
Group: Administrators
United States
Messages: 8717
Status: Offline
| Quote second-ich (  ) Isn't this a quasar? I always thought black holes with accretion disks are quasars but maybe I mix something up there. A quasar is a supermassive black hole at the center of a galaxy with an extremely bright accretion disk. There are many black holes with accretion disks which are not quasars, including Cygnus X-1.
All forum users, please read this! My SE mods and addons Phenom II X6 1090T 3.2 GHz, 16 GB DDR3 RAM, GTX 970 3584 MB VRAM
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| second-ich | Date: Friday, 06.11.2015, 15:42 | Message # 716 |
 Space Pilot
Group: Users
Germany
Messages: 87
Status: Offline
| Quote HarbingerDawn (  ) A quasar is a supermassive black hole at the center of a galaxy with an extremely bright accretion disk.
Thanks for the explanation. So are there black holes without accretion disks?
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| DeathStar | Date: Friday, 06.11.2015, 15:46 | Message # 717 |
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Pioneer
Group: Users
Croatia
Messages: 515
Status: Offline
| It's... beautiful, I swear. *wipes tear from eye*
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| n0b0dy | Date: Friday, 06.11.2015, 16:20 | Message # 718 |
 Explorer
Group: Users
Pirate
Messages: 297
Status: Offline
| Quote SpaceEngineer (  ) I am worknig on new black holes
OMG . And I thought Doctor of Space and JackDole's work on black holes and accretion disk was really good. Not implying that it is not . But this.. this is beyond our wildest dreams.
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| JackDole | Date: Friday, 06.11.2015, 16:37 | Message # 719 |
 Star Engineer
Group: Local Moderators
Germany
Messages: 1742
Status: Offline
| Quote SpaceEngineer (  ) you can approach them up to the event horizon and see how Universe collapses into point above you That's something I've been missing. Now only remains the question, when I get down to the black hole, I will then also pulled in the length?
Don't forget to look here.
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| SpaceEngineer | Date: Friday, 06.11.2015, 16:57 | Message # 720 |
 Author of Space Engine
Group: Administrators
Russian Federation
Messages: 4800
Status: Offline
| Quote Kamil_Cader (  ) Did You mean it is possiblle to cross the event horizon now? Yes, but if this happen, SE will crash together with Windows, and all data on hard drive will be destroyed. So don't try to cross the event horizon :)
Quote Salvo (  ) will every black hole have the accretion disk or just some of them? Only some black holes will have accretion disks.
Quote Salvo (  ) Also are the accretion disks flat like planetary rings? :) Yes they are flat right now, but maybe I will improve the code to support volumetric disks.
Quote JackDole (  ) when I get down to the black hole, I will then also pulled in the length? In future updates, ships will have a lot of possibilities to be destroyed: ripped apart by tidal forces, evaporated by strong acretion disk emission, or by 1 million degrees plasma, crushed into debris moving at near-c velocity, etc. There will be almost to chance to cross the event horizon.
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