lL-l-T--------T-----------------------T---------------T-------T-------T-----TR >TOOLS FOR ASTRONOMY DAVID CHANDLER CO.-- SOFTWARE, SLIDES, AND PUBLICATIONS (All items authored and published by David Chandler except as noted) DEEP SPACE 3-D, Ver 2.0 -- Program Disk, Data Disk, Small 3-D Viewer Single User Registration $ 59 _____ ______ Site Registration (Per building) $ 120 _____ ______ LARGE TABLE-TOP 3-D VIEWER KIT $ 35 _____ ______ (For viewing pairs of 8-1/2 x 11 printouts in stereo) COMET WATCH--A newsletter for announcements of new comet discoveries, giving orbital elements that can be used with DEEP SPACE 3-D. 15 issues per volume, "Vol 0" gives extra background information and lots of data to get started. (All subscriptions begin and end at volume boundaries to simplify bookkeeping.) Vol 0 $ 10 ea _____ ______ _____ Volumes starting with the current Volume $ 10 ea _____ ______ Small 3-D viewer, when ordered with Comet Watch $ 3 ea _____ ______ - (Overseas Subscriptions: $ 15, viewer $ 4) _____ ______ ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ | (** REGISTERED USERS ONLY **) | | Additional Star Database Files: SST05-SST77, 15 disks, 248,709 Stars | | Circle Disk #'s: 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 | | | | 1 or more, $10 ea / 5 or more, $8 ea / 10 or more, $7 ea AMOUNT: ______ | | | | Also: Orbital elements for over 1100 comets dating back to 240 BC, based | | on Brian Marsden's "Catalog of Cometary Orbits" (and more) $ 15 ______ | ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ DEEP SPACE 3-D, Ver 2.0 (Unregistered Trial Copy--Disks Only) (With $15 coupon toward registration price) $ 15 _____ ______ SMALL 3-D VIEWER (by Taylor-Merchant Co.) $ 5 _____ ______ PLANETS IN THE CLASSROOM (Not Shareware) -- A program for understanding planetary motion, specifically designed for teachers, but of interest to amateur astronomers as well. Comes with a manual of classroom exercises appropriate for various levels from elementary through college. IBM _____ APPLE II _____ $ 39 _____ ______ - (Apple version implemented by Michael Lovekin.) ** THE NIGHT SKY ** / A specially designed low distortion "Star Wheel" for anyone who really wants to get to know the sky. This practical, take-it-out- and-use-it star finder is the real backbone of our product line. Over 1/4 million copies are in circulation. Astronomy educators are its most vocal fans: "The Night Sky is not just another planisphere. I think The Night Sky is the finest and easiest to use star finding aid in existence." -- Jack Horkheimer, T.V.'s "Star Hustler", and Planetarium Director at the Miami Museum of Science. $ 5.95 _____ ______ Latitude or nearest large city ______________ - (Teachers: Ask for "Sample Classroom Exercises using The Night Sky") + EXPLORING THE NIGHT SKY WITH BINOCULARS -- (Illustrated by Don Davis) A written companion to THE NIGHT SKY that leads the beginner from "naked eye" astronomy to the ideal "first telescope": a simple pair of binoculars. It covers both what to see and the significance of what is seen. This book was written with adults in mind, but it received honorable mention in the Older Children's Division of the New York Academy of Sciences Children's Science Book Awards. "...the best short introduction to astronomy ever written." --Doug McCarty, Planetarium Director, Mt. Hood Community College. "From the creator of what I consider to be the best planisphere available (The Night Sky), comes Exploring the Night Sky with Binoculars, a companion to that star dial. Taken together, the two items--plus a pair of binoculars-- constitute the best introduction to observational astronomy you could ask for." --John Mood, Astronomy Magazine. $ 5.95 _____ ______ - (Star Dial and Book ordered together) $ 10 _____ ______ DON DAVIS ARTWORK -- Slides of the paintings of one of the world's greatest space artists. These slides are like photographs from points in time and space inaccessible to the camera. They come fully annotated to interpret the wealth of subtle, accurate detail found in each painting. (For more background on Don Davis, see the June 1985 issue of Sky and Telescope.) The Moon and its Formation (21 slides) -- A classic time lapse sequence showing the formation of the moon from its early accretion to the present day. $ 21 _____ ______ The Earth (16 slides) -- The earth through time, continental drift, impacts from space, theories of dinosaur extinction. $ 16 _____ ______ Eclipses (12 slides) -- Lunar and solar eclipse phenomena as seen from the - earth, space, and the surface of the moon. $ 12 _____ ______ The Terrestrial Planets (18 slides) -- Mercury, Venus, and Mars, with emphasis on Mars and the Viking missions. $ 18 _____ ______ The Outer Solar System (36 slides) -- The gas giants, their moons, their rings, the solar system as seen from Pluto and the Pioneer X spacecraft as it leaves the solar system. $ 36 _____ ______ Beyond the Solar System (10 slides) -- The Orion Nebula, the Milky Way, a time sequence of Hercules X-1, and the gravitational lens effect of a black hole. $ 10 _____ ______ All six sets ordered simultaneously (113 slides) $ 107.35 _____ ______ (For reproduction rights or arrangements for commercial use of slides, write - to Don Davis, c/o Hansen Planetarium, Salt Lake City, UT.) \ --------------------------------------------------------------------------- 6.75% Sales Tax (in CA only) ______ $3 Domestic Shipping Charge on All Slide Orders ______ ** Overseas ** Large 3-D Viewer: (Air) $ 35, (Surface) $ 13 ______ ** Overseas ** All other items, add: (Air) $ 5, (Surface) $ 2 ______ (Checks must be payable in US Dollars drawn on US banks) TOTAL: ______ (Domestic shipping will be added on all invoices if not paid in advance) Name_________________________________________________________ Address______________________________________________________ City___________________________________State______Zip________ >A SAGA IN THREE PARTS PART I A new comet is discovered! It is faint now, but it is expected to brighten almost to naked-eye visibility (about 6th magnitude) in a few weeks. The newspapers won't carry stories about this one, but you know about it within a week of its discovery because you subscribe to COMET WATCH. You have had bad luck with comets in the past. You tried to find Halley's Comet but couldn't find it in your brand new marketed-for-the- occasion telescope. The bottom line is you couldn't find your way around the sky and didn't know exactly where to point the thing...but this time things will be different! You have all the right tools: a sturdy star dial that you are using nightly to learn the constellations one by one, a nice little book that made you realize the value of those binoculars you had hidden up in a closet while you were struggling with your new telescope, and DEEP SPACE 3-D, the most versatile comet crunching computer program available. Back to our story. COMET WATCH arrives in the mail. You type in the six magic numbers that specify the comet's orbit. Within minutes you have on the screen an ephemeris for the next two months. "Ephemeris"...you just learned the word, but it has a nice ring to it. It means lots of numbers! You go on. Within minutes you have printed out a large-scale finder chart in "star atlas mode" which you can use to spot the faint smudge with your binoculars, and in -turn guide your telescope to its target... But that's not all. You run What's Up for the current date and look at the rise and set times for the comet. You see that the comet rises at 4am, so you run What's Up again, this time for an early morning hour. You do another ephemeris, this one correlated with the current What's Up settings. You plot an all sky map and see two paths for the comet: one showing its path relative to the constellations, just what you had before, and the other one showing its path relative to the horizons. These paths gradually separate, since the star positions are for one particular night, but the comet is shown for several weeks, during which time the sky will have rotated considerably. You use the cursor to identify the dates when the comet will be highest above the horizon and are pleased to see it will be well placed when it is at its brightest. You run yet another ephemeris, this one not for "finding", but for "understanding". You plot out the whole orbit on the screen and see how the comet zips past the earth's orbit in its brief encounter with the sun before its slow return to the outer fringes of the solar system. You put the cursor on the screen and use the key option to step along the orbit, matching the earth's position with the comet's position day for day. You plot out the orbit in 3-D to help visualize the orientation of the comet's orbit in space. It is apparent that this comet's orbit is highly inclined to the plane of the solar system. The comet will loop up and over the earth, causing it to move far to the north in the sky then disappear below the southern horizon. Not -only are you confident of finding this comet, you have come to know it well. PART II You are a teacher planning a sky observation night for your students. You want to find a date when the moon is up for viewing in the evening sky but not so close to full that it will drown out everything else. You want your students to get home at a reasonable hour, but you want to stay late enough so it will be fully dark. You would like your students to see the rings of Saturn or the moons of Jupiter in a telescope, but you realize these planets are not always out in the evening sky. How can you plan for a successful session in time to announce it to parents a month or more in advance? The What's Up option is the place you start. You enter a rough target date and your observing site. You immediately see the dates of all the new moons thoughout the year and all of the moon phases in your target month. You pick a date near first quarter for a well placed evening moon. (Craters show up best at first quarter because they cast long shadows then.) The default observing time is the end of evening twilight, which looks OK to you, so you accept it. You choose the ALTER DATE option to zero in on the day best suited for your event. You print out the information screen for your own reference. With the date and time selected, you go on to check out the rise and set times of the moon and planets. Returning to the main menu you run a full-sky star map for the event, limited to 3rd magnitude stars (since you know that's all that will be visible from town anyway). You print it out, duplicate it, you -are ready to go. PART III You are an avid amateur astronomer, out on a mountain top long past most people's bed time. You run across a "faint fuzzy" in your telescope that isn't on your star atlas. You do a careful sketch of the field stars to get a fix on its position, estimate its magnitude, and watch it for a half hour or so to verify that it drifts slowly past the background stars. It does! You have a comet! Anticipating immortality (for your last name at least) you risk life and limb rushing back down the winding mountain road...but before placing a telegram to Cambridge, MA, you decide to check What's Up first. You subscribe to COMET WATCH, so you have maintained a file of all the comets that have come by in the last few years. You have copied the ones currently visible to a smaller file for easy access. You run What's Up to get a listing of positions, estimated magnitudes, and rise and set times. Just for good measure you run it for the whole file so nothing will slip by. You don't like looking at long lists of numbers, so you select all the comets for inclusion on the star chart, return to the main menu and generate a star chart for the current day and time. You choose the function key for "Planets etc." and every comet in the file shows up on the screen (most of them far too faint to be visible). You immediately notice a comet close to where you found yours. You put the cursor on it to identify it and go back to the What's Up -option again to take a closer look... It becomes clear that the comet you discovered (you really discovered it!) was also discovered several months earlier by someone named Liller. In fact you had looked at it back then when it was much brighter and had a nice tail, but it was in a totally different part of the sky. It had dimmed down so much that you had removed it from your current comet file (CURRENT.CFL), but had the good sense to keep it in your backup comet file (RECENT.CFL). You're disappointed, but you realize that your thorough search has saved you from the embarrassment of a false alarm and the expense of a needless telegram. Still you realize that your comet is out there waiting for you...but that's for another day. ..... (That's how it might have been. The truth of the matter is I didn't have What's Up at the time. I did have Version 1.3 of DEEP SPACE up and running, and I did have Comet Liller on file! If I had taken the time I could have run ephemerides for all the comets in the file and found that Comet Liller was still bright enough to be seen and right where it should have been...but that was too time consuming, so I just checked a few likely candidates. I sent the telegram and later swallowed hard when I discovered my error. I decided then and there to add a new option to the program. That's why you and I have the handy What's Up option today. I have written this program for me. If you like astronomy like I like astronomy, you might find it nice for you too.) >THE DISTRIBUTION DISKS DEEP SPACE 3-D, Version 2.0 comes on three floppy disks. We encourage you to pass around good, clean copies of the unaltered disk set. Please do not delete any files. The PROGRAM disk should contain: DS3D.EXE, DS3D.OVR -- The main program and overlay files {CGA, HERC, EGAVGA}.BGI -- Video drivers README.DOC, INSTALL.BAT, $$.BAT, $$$.BAT -- Installation Files (These are used only when transfering files to a hard drive.) DS3D.BAT -- Batch file for use on a hard drive to transfer you to the DS3D subdirectory and run the program. If DSCONFIG.FIL is present, the disks have been used previously and contain someone else's configuration data. Delete this file or choose the CHANGE CONFIGURATION SETTINGS option at the main menu when you start the program. - The DS SUPPLEMENT disk should contain: {PLCRUNCH, CONLINE, NAMENUM}.DAT -- External files needed by the program CONVERT.EXE -- A separate program to convert among Version 1.3 comet files, Version 2.0 comet files, and Text files. RECENT.CFL -- Comet orbital elements (starter set) Comet files will expand as you add data on more comets. (You can keep up to date on your comet files by subscribing to Comet Watch.) TEXT.TXT -- The text file you are reading at this very moment. SST01 -- The first of six star data files distrubuted with the core program. - The STAR DATA #0 disk should contain: SST{02, 03, 04, 05, 06} -- The basic star data (expandable to SST77) (Only the first six SST files are part of the Shareware package. If you have obtained more than these six SST files without registering your program and purchasing them directly, you are eating forbidden fruit at our expense. Please either register or delete the additional files.) \ \ - The hard disk installation program INSTALL.BAT creates a directory called \DS3D, and two sub directories called DSDATA and DSFILES. --All of the files on the DEEP SPACE 3-D disk and most of the files on DS SUPPLEMENT are copied to the \DS3D directory. --The SST files are copied to the DSDATA sub directory --The CONVERT.EXE program and the comet data file, RECENT.CFL, are copied to the DSFILES subdirectory. --The DS3D.BAT file is copied to the root directory. These directories could be renamed or two or more of them could be combined, but the file groupings must remain intact for the program to access them properly. >STARTUP OPTIONS Startup Options If you have obtained clean copies of the distribution disks, you were led through the configuration procedures at the beginning of the program. You can alter your choices at any time by selecting the CHANGE DEFAULT SETTINGS option at the Main Menu. If the file path options or the video display options are not set properly for your system the program will most likely crash. Other choices are more benign, but important for the user. The first item on the configuration agenda is to specify the type of video card in your machine. The issue is the video card, not the monitor. You may have a monochrome monitor with a CGA video card. The program will attempt to detect which card is present. Under normal conditions you should be able to accept the default selection. This option is provided to override the program's choice if it is unable to detect the correct card or if more than one video card is present. If you have something other than a Hercules display, your next choice is the combination of colors to use. Try the function keys as indicated to see the range of possibilities and find a combination that is easily readable. - Next, give the names of the locations of the various groups of files indicated. If they are on floppy disks, give the drive letters. Remember, the main program files (DS.EXE and DS.OVR) must be continuously present on the default drive. The remaining can be anywhere on the system, or swapped in and out at the program prompts if they are on floppy disks. Even if the main program is on a hard disk it is possible to use floppies for some of the remaining files. On the next page, specify the number of SST (Star data) files you are using. You should have six with the original disks and registered users may purchase up to SST77. - Finally, there are two screens that have to do with your location. You may describe a primary and a secondary observing site. A third site may be defined "on the run" while running various options in the main program. It too will be stored until it is redefined. Look on a large scale atlas at a library to find the latitude and longidude of your observing site as accurately as possible. Take a stab at your altitude. The accuracy here is not critical for most purposes. The name of your time zone is for printout purposes only. The number of the time zone is more critical. A partial table is provided to help determine the correct number. Daylight time shifts U.S. observers one hour closer to Greenwich (subtract one hour), and Asian observers one hour farther from Greenwich (add one hour). >DEFAULTS Defaults How do you make a program simple enough for a beginner and at the same time powerful enough to satisfy an expert? One way is to allow lots of choices for the experts, even regarding picky details, but to suggest an answer to every question that at least makes sense. A "default" is computer jargon for those pre-selected answers provided by the program. DEEP SPACE 3-D has default for just about everything! This makes it easy to explore areas you may not understand very well at first. If you come to a question you don't care about or don't understand, just choose the default and keep going. The more you learn about astronomy, the more you will appreciate having control over all the picky details. To choose a default answer, simply type the key. You will find that you can go through almost the entire program simply hitting the key, and still get something of interest. If you come to a whole page of questions and like the looks of all the default answers, simply jump to the bottom of the page with the key and keep going. As you get more comfortable with the program and read up more about astronomy, you will find the program's capabilities will keep up with your growth along the way. >DATA ENTRY Data Entry Data is entered either by making a selecting with a scroll bar or typing data directly into input boxes. To use the scroll bar, move up or down with the arrow keys, page up or down with the PgUp and PgDn keys, go all the way to the beginning or end of a list with the Home or End keys. You can also select entries by their first letter. The cursor will cycle through all the entries having the same starting letter. When entering data into the input boxes, most single character entries do not require the use of the enter key. Simply press the appropriate key. To allow you to recover from accidental keystrokes, there is usually an entry at the bottom of a page to confirm the earier entries on that page. When editing an existing entry, if the first key typed is a normal character, the entry will be erased under the assumption that you want to retype the whole entry. If you want to edit the entry without destroying what is already there, make the first keystroke with a Home, End, or Arrow key. After destroying a few entries you will get used to it. >WHAT'S UP: SUMMARY PAGE What's Up: Summary Page The What's up option is a handy grab-bag of features for anyone who actively observes the sky. After specifying a target date you are given information that you may want to use to refine your choice of date or narrow in on a time most suitable to your observing needs. The sun and moon both cast a lot of light and can adversely affect observations of other fainter objects. New Moon equals No Moon. The time of New Moon (plus or minus a few days) is traditionally the best time of the month for astronomy club star parties. First quarter moon will be overhead in the evening sky, setting around midnight, and third quarter moon will not rise until near midnight. First quarter moon is a good time for public viewing since the moon itself is a prime telescopic subject for the general public. First quarter is also good because the craters cast long shadows along the terminator (the moon's "twilight zone"). Sunrise and sunset are also important. Times vary considerably throughout the year, especially at higher latitudes. Astronomical twilight is defined as the time when the sun is 18 degrees below the horizon. This is the time when the sky is generally considered dark for astronomical purposes. >WHAT'S UP: PLANETS, ETC What's Up: Planets, Etc. The Planets page of the What's Up option gives a wealth of information for anyone who wants to read it. The other option is to let the computer digest the information and display it visually on a map of the day and time. In summary the column headings mean the following: R.A. --Right Ascension: angle in hours, not degrees, measured eastward along the equator from the Vernal Equinox. Dec --Declination: angle above or below the celestial equator measured in degrees. Long --Ecliptic Longitude: angle in degrees measured eastward along the ecliptic instead of the equator. Lat --Ecliptic Latitude: angle in degrees above or below the ecliptic. Elong --Elongation: the angle of the planet from the sun as seen from the earth. - The remaining categories are rise and set and related times. Besides rise and set times there are two other categories: 20 deg rise/set: time of rise or set at a hypothetical "smog line" 20 degrees above the horizon. Even if there is no smog, at 20 degrees above the horizon you are looking through 3 times as much atmosphere as directly overhead. Transit: time when the planet crosses the local meridian (the local meridian being the north-south line passing directly overhead). If a planet never rises, the rise and set times are marked: ----- If a planet never sets, the rise and set times are marked: +++++ (Similarly if it never crosses the 20 degree altitude mark) The time of transit is indicated even if the planet is below the horizon at that time. >WHAT'S UP: COMETS What's Up: Comets You may be able to tell this program is heavy on comets! Comets are interesting observational targets, although beginners often have difficulty locating them. Most require a telescope or at least binoculars to observe. The comet ephemeris option follows a single comet over an extended period of time. The What's Up comet section, on the other hand, is a time cross section. It shows where any desired number of comets are at a single time. Usually not more than two or three comets are actually bright enough to see at one time, but the others are still out there, however, and may be plotted. This is especially useful if you want to avoid mistaking a known comet for a new discovery (cf. SAGA, Part III). The comet option shows R.A., Dec., Elongation, rise, set, 20-deg rise and set, and transit times (see planet page for descriptions of these). Also if the appropriate information is available in the file, an estimated magnitude is given. These estimates are rarely accurate, but they may indicate whether a given comet is conceivably visible at a given time. - Finally, you are given the opportunity to "select" any number of comets. If a comet is selected, it is put on a list with the planets to be displayed on the day and time star map. For selection purposes you have several options: Y: Select a given comet N: Reject a given comet S: Select all of the remaining comets R: Reject all of the remaining comets (but still scroll through them) : Keep what has been selected so far, and quit. If you type S or R, you may interrupt the scrolling at any point and revise your selections from that point onward. >COMET ELEMENTS Comet Elements You can enter the orbital elements for a comet in the Comet Ephemeris option. Orbital elements are six numbers that describe a comet orbit's size, shape, orientation in space, and time of closest approach to the sun. They have strange names, but you don't have to know anything about them to be able to plug them into Deep Space 3-D. If you subscribe to Comet Watch or get the IAU circulars directly, simply put the right numbers in the right slots and let the computer go at it. Deep Space 3-D prints out the numerical data and then allows you to display it in a variety of ways. The knotty problem has been how to obtain the elements. This is not the kind of thing you could get from monthly astronomy magazines. The news is of the fast breaking variety. You could subscribe to the IAU Circulars directly, or rely on your local planetarium for information, but now you can get elements fast, directly from David Chandler Co. in our new newsletter service: COMET WATCH. See the TOOLS FOR ASTRONOMY heading for information on how to subscribe. -The six magic numbers are as follows: Orbital Elements T : Time of perihelion passage--when the comet is closest to the sun e : Eccentricity--a measure of the elongation of the orbit. For a circle, e=0. For a parabola, e=1. Above 1 the orbit is a hyperbola. q : Perihelion distance--closest approach to the sun PERI : Argument of perihelion--measures the orientation of a comet's orbit within its own orbital plane. NODE : Longitude of the Ascending Node--locates where the comet's orbit crosses the ecliptic plane. i : Inclination--the angle bewteen the orbital planes of the earth and comet. These are published in IAU Circulars by the Center for Astronomical Telegrams after a new comet has been discovered and tracked for several days. Refined elements are typically published after a longer period of observation. >COMET FILES Comet Files If your interest in comets is purely observational, you can delete most long period comets after they have faded. Most will never return in your lifetime. However, for other aspects of comet study you may want to collect orbital data to compare comets even after they are long gone. One of the optional disks available to registered users has data on over 1100 comets dating back to the first confirmed sighting of Comet Halley in 240 BC (which astronomers refer to as the year -239: Astronomers have a zero year; historians don't!) In any case, if you collect large amounts of orbital data it can best be kept in multiple files. The RECENT.CFL file is on the distribution disk by itself, but another convenient file to create might be called CURRENT.CFL, for only the currently visible comets. To start a new file with fresh data, choose the Ephemeris Option at the Main Menu. When the existing comet files are shown, type to start a new file, and type in the new file name when asked. You will then be presented with the data entry form where new elements can be typed in. - Instead of entering fresh data into the new file, data can be copied to a new file or between existing files. To do this, select a comet in an existing file, and choose the Copy option shown at the bottom of the page when its elements are displayed. A menu of existing comet files will be shown allowing you to select which file to copy it to. If you want to start a new file, type to enter the new file name. Another option at the same point where the copy option is offered, is to delete a comet. You may well want to enter new comet data in CURRENT.CFL, then copy it to RECENT.CFL and delete it from CURRENT.CFL when it is no longer easily visible. The program CONVERT.EXE is a separate program from DEEP SPACE 3-D which must be in the same subdirectory as the files it is to operate on (by default, \ds3d\dsfiles, if you have a hard disk). It will convert .CFL files to or from the old Ver. 1.3 .DAT files, and also to or from ASCII .TXT files that can be read, edited, or organized with a text editor or word processor. If text files are to be converted back to .CFL form, they must be in pure ASCII and follow the pattern of the text files produced by CONVERT.EXE. >DAY AND TIME OPTIONS Day and Time Options You can enter the starting day and time and range of dates for a comet ephemeris in several ways, depending on the purposes you have in mind. If you want the program to display a comet orbit in relation to the earth's orbit, choose the "A" option. This allows you to select the calculation interval and number of calculations, and the program chooses the starting date to be symmetric about perihelion. If the comet has a relatively short period you will be asked if you want to compute positions for an entire orbit. If you intend to display the comet on the screen, there is room in the allocated memory space for 500 points, counting the comet head, comet tail, sun, earth, and any other planet or comet positions that might be included. Based on this space, the program will proposed an interval and a number of positions to close the orbit. Look at the proposal and decide if it will be satisfactory for your purposes. Remember, comets move very quickly near the sun and very slowly far from the sun, so the jumps can get to be quite large if the interval is too long. If the interval is 10 to 30 days, the results will usually look reasonably good. If the interval needed to get a complete orbit exceeds a year, the option is not even offered. - Day-and-Time star maps are for a particular day and time, so comet ephemeris calculations must be coordinated with this data to be meaningfull. This is done automatically when you choose option "B". Option B ephimerides are linked to particular What's Up computations. All you have to do is specify the computation interval and number of computations. The C option for day and time entry for comet ephimerides is direct entry. You specify the starting day and time, the interval in days between calculations, and the number of calculations desired. To intelligently decide whether to run for morning or evening hours, you need to know whether the comet will be a morning or evening object. The program therefore displays the times of sunrise, sunset, morning and evening twilight, and the rise, set, and "20 degree horizon" rise and set times of the comet. Everything you need to make your decision is there when you need it. Since the three time selection modes are for different purposes, their ephemeris files are marked with different extensions: .EPA, .EPB, and .EPC. When you want to do orbit plots, .EPA files will be listed. For Day and Time charts, only .EPB files will be listed (and you will be warned if the one you choose has incompatible dates). For any other charts, all three types of files will be listed. >COMET EPHEMERIDES Comet Ephemerides An ephemeris (plural: e-phe-mer'-i-des) is a listing of where a celestial body will be when. The ephemerides for comets produced by Deep Space 3-D also tells various things relating the appearance and position of the comet. Here is a summary: The range of dates goes down the left side of the page. R.A. & Dec --Position in the sky R --Distance from sun to comet Delta --Distance from earth to comet Elong. --Elongation: angle from sun to comet as seen from earth Phase --For a comet this tells to what extent the tail points away from us. 90 degrees is directly across our line of sight. PA --Position angle: the angle of the tail in the sky measured counterclockwise from north --------- Mag. --Depending on the information you type in, the printout may have an estimate of the magnitude (emphasis on estimate!) >STAR MAP TYPES Star Map Types Deep Space 3-D can produce star maps in four different coordinate systems, each useful for a particular purpose. Star Atlas Mode--Equatorial Coordinates measure positions relative to the celestial poles and equator. Right Ascension is similar to longitude, but it is measured in hours (24ths of a circle) instead of degrees (360ths of a circle). This is the way star atlases display various parts of the sky. Day and Time Mode--Horizon Coordinates measure positions relative to the horizons and the zenith. Since the sky rotates, this changes constantly. A chart printed in this mode is good for a specific day and time. If planets are not included on it the star chart is good over a range of dates, slightly earlier each night. If you want to observe throughout the night you will want a planisphere (a "Star Wheel"--see TOOLS FOR ASTRONOMY) that can be taken into the field and updated from one hour to the next. For a specific celestial event, or brief observing period, however, a Day and Time mode chart generated by Deep Space 3-D will give very good service. This chart mode can be zoomed to the horizon view looking in any of 16 compass directions, for a larger scale, easy to read chart ideal for passing out to a scout troop or group of students for an evening's sky orientation. - Ecliptic Coordinates might be termed "Solar System Mode". This projection is most useful when studying motions of objects in our solar system. The earth's orbital plane is called the "ecliptic" plane, hence the name. Any plane cutting through a sphere cuts it along a circle (imagine cutting a basketball in half). That circle where the ecliptic plane meets the sky is called simply the "ecliptic". It marks the centerline of the Zodiac band, the path of the sun, moon, and planets through the sky. To print out a full sky map with the Zodiac as the center line, try an E-W Mercator Projection with 360 degrees per 10 inches (for a full page) centered at 0 degrees Longitude and Latitude in ecliptic coordinates. To look at comet orbits from space in such a way that the earth's orbit looks horizontal, use ecliptic coordinates for the base map. - Galactic Coordinates are based on the circle of the Milky Way through the sky. Zero degrees longitude and latitude is looking directly into the center of our galaxy, which happens to lie in the direction of Sagittarius. Try plotting a whole sky map (E-W Mercator Projection) down to about 5th magnitude in Equatorial Coordinates. The screen will become quite cluttered,but the dense band of stars along the Milky Way will stand out clearly. (There is an upper limit of 5000 stars that can be held in the allocated memory area at one time, hence the 5th magnitude limit.) If the map is repeated, but this time in Galactic coordinates, the dense star band will lie right along the center line of the page. This is clearly a useful projection when studying distributions of objects relative to the plane of our galaxy. A future update to Deep Space 3-D will have a large database of galaxies, nebulae, star clusters, etc., for which this projection will produce some interesting results. >MAP PROJECTIONS Map Projections When a spherical surface is plotted on a flat map something has got to give. Stretching will always occur. The question is what kind of distortion is least bothersome for a particular application. Some distort shapes, others distort areas. Others introduce more exotic distortions. Generally speaking, for constellation recognition preserving shapes is important. Thus the collection of projections offered here specialize in shape preserving projections of one kind or another. The Stereographic Projection should not be confused with stereo viewing of 3-D images. (The possible confusion is particularly apparent in this program that highlights stereo 3-D!) Basically, to flatten out a rubber ball, the edges must be stretched, causing a lengthening in the east-west direction. The Polar Equidistant Projection has just such a distortion. The Stereographic Projection compensates for the shape distortion by stretching the surface radially so east-west and north-south distortions match at every point. The result is gross exaggeration of size far from the center, which is the price paid for keeping the shapes correct. Overall, the Stereographic projection is a reasonable compromise for general purpose use, so it has been chosen as the default projection. - The Mercator Projection was designed for making earth maps for navigation. If you follow the compass bearing of a line on a Mercator Projection you will get to your destination. It is not the most efficient path, but it will get you there. For celestial use it is more relevant to note that this map has the same kind of "compensatory stretching" as the Stereographic map, so they also preserve shapes at the expense of gross area distortion far from the center line. But whereas the Stereographic projection is accurate at a point, the Mercator projection is accurate along a line. It is a good choice if the subject of interest is primarily oriented along one particular direction, such as a Zodiac band or any other wrap-around view of the sky. Two variations are offered here: N-S and E-W, depending on the nature of the material to be mapped. The Gnomonic Projection is the kind of a projection produced by a camera. You might think this would be the ideal projection, but both size and shape are grossly distorted far from the center. It is, however, a useful projection for small areas, especially if computer generated star maps are to be overlaid onto or otherwise correlated with photographs. >STELLAR MAGNITUDE Stellar Magnitude Star brightness is measured on a "magnitude" scale. This is a scale originally based on naked eye estimates of brightness. First magnitude represents the brightest category or "First Rank" stars. Sixth magnitude represented the faintest stars visible to the unaided eye. Thus increasing magnitude implies decreasing brightness. Telescopes have extended the scale to much higher numbers and photometers have increased the precision to several decimal digits. Generally speaking, if you want to plot naked eye stars, you should cut off somewhere around 6 or 6.5, depending on whose eyes we are talking about: about 6000 stars. If you want a whole sky map, that is far too many stars for a useful chart. The starter database goes down to a little beyond Mag. 7.2. That is around 19,000 stars. The whole 77 file database go down to about 10, with spotty coveage near the limits. The larger database is most useful when you want to generate a detailed view of a small part of the sky. With the full database you could plot the Pleiades star cluster, for instance, to a scale of 1/2 degree per inch, and still have a field rich in stars. >USING THE CURSOR Using the Cursor Once a map is plotted there are a number of interactive features accessed with the function keys. brings up a cursor. Move it with the arrow keys, for small jumps, or with the arrow keys in conjunction with the Shift key for single pixel fine adjustments. If the cursor is centered on any object (star, planet, comet, etc.) the object will be identified. If two stars are overlaid on the same pixel, both stars will be identified in sequence. uses the cursor in a different way. If planets or comets are "overlaid" onto the star map, the F7 cursor will jump from one to the next. For comets and planets generated by the What's Up routine it will simply give the name of the object. For comets generated by the ephemeris routine, it will give the name of the comet, and also the date, since the different images are for different dates. One particularly impressive use of the F7 cursor is to trace out the path of a comet orbiting the sun along with the earth. See the COMET PATHS FROM SPACE section for more details. >SAVING AND RESTORING MAPS Saving and Restoring Maps Star maps may be saved with the F2 function key. Simply give the name to be used for the map file. A saved map can be restored much faster than it can be computed in the first place because all the heavy math has already been done. This feature will be especially appreciated by those of you who have the older slower PC and XT type computers without math co-processors. To restore a map, choosed the DISPLAY SAVED MAP option at the Main Menu. A directory of all saved maps will be generated from which you can select a map with the scroll bar. Once a map is restored it is ready for any function that could be performed on a freshly computed map. >ZOOMING Zooming To Zoom a star map that was printed in Equatorial, Ecliptic, or Galactic Coordinates, type the F3 function key. A rectangular box will appear to the same proportions as the full-screen map. Manipulate the box with the PgUp PgDn and Arrow keys to frame the view that is desired. For finer adjustments use the same keys in conjunction with the Shift key. Once the map has been zoomed, typing F3 again will restore the original dimensions. If the print option is chosen while a map is zoomed, the zoomed view will be what is printed out. The Zoom feature is different for the Horizon Coordinates (Day and Time) map. Here the Zoom takes you from a whole sky view to a horizon view. Directions are specified by the points of the compass: N, S, E, and W specify the quadrants; NW, NE, SW, and SE split half way between the primary divisions; N-NE, E-NE, E-SE, S-SE, etc. split the difference once again for a total of 16 possible directions. The Left and Right Arrow keys step by 16ths, the up and down arrow keys step to the nearest 8th, the PgUp and PgDn keys step to the nearest quadrants, and the Home and End keys jump to North and South. ESC takes you back to the whole sky view. >CONSTELLATIONS Constellation Lines & Names Constellation lines are drawn with the F4 key. Once they are drawn the constellation names automatically pop up. The constellation names present a bit of a problem if the goal is to use them on printouts. First, they tend to obscure the stars, and secondly, the screen representations (which differ from one type of video monitor to another) may bear little resemblence to the actual text size on paper. Furthermore, not all constellation names that show up on the screen may be desirable. Sometimes only a tiny corner of a constellation intrudes on the edge of the paper and you may want to ignore it. Or, if you are dealing with students, you may want to focus their attention on a few constellations only. To solve these problems as conveniently as possible the following method has been devised: 1. The constellations on screen are in the smallest font for that screen provided by the language in use (Turbo Pascal). 2. They are popped into position automatically for quick and easy identification of constellations even though they might overwrite significant details of the maps. Each constellation name is associated with the brightest star of a constellation that is shown on the screen, - usually displayed a short distance to the right of the star. 3. By typing F4 a second time you can enter a mode where you will cycle through the constellation names, forward through the alphabet with the ENTER key, or backward with the Backspace key. The highlighted name can be positioned with the arrow keys, in conjunction with the Shift key for finer spacing. 4. As the name is being moved, it is represented by a small rectangle that represents the computed size of the printed version of the name. This will aid you in placing it properly. Once the ENTER key is typed the name will pop to the location of the rectangle. 5. Names may be deleted with the DEL key when they are selected in the cycle. 6. If you plan to print out a zoomed view, you should postpone positioning the names until your final step before printing. Names positioned for one view do not necessarily match what would be desirable in a zoomed view, so the offsets are canceled upon zooming. Deleted names are also resurected in this way. >PLANETS, ETC. Planets, Etc. Planets come in two varieties: those that outshine most if not all of the stars (Mercury, Venus, Mars, Jupiter, and Saturn), and those that require optical aid even to be seen (Uranus [borderline], Neptune, and Pluto). The positions of the Sun, Moon, and all the planets are computed in the What's Up routine. This information may be displayed on a star map (any variety) by pressing the F5 key. On first press the sun, moon, and bright planets will be shown. To get Uranus, Neptune, and Pluto, press it a second time. Any comets computed with the What's Up routine will also be shown at the same time. The planets are identifiable by their symbols. Further identification is possible using the F7 key to jump from one to the next, displaying their names in a box at the top left corner of the screen. They may also be identified manually by placing the F1 cursor on the symbol. For symbols with a symmetric portion, such as Mercury, Venus, Mars, and Uranus, the pixel to hit is the center of the symmetric portion. The asymmetric symbols have a small dot added for targeting. >COMET PATHS FROM EARTH Comet Paths from Earth Comet paths seen from earth could be termed "finder charts". They can be plotted on any kind of base map, but equatorial "Star Atlas" mode and "Day and Time" mode charts would usually be the most useful. For detailed views plot them at intervals of 1-5 days for no more than 10 or 15 calculations at a time. Find the center of the path from the ephemeris as a best first guess for the map coordinates to use. A word here about the displayed "tail" is in order. The tail displayed by the program is in no way a prediction of actual tail length: it is fixed at an artificial a 1/10 AU length (about 10 million miles). However, it does reflect the effect of distance and phase on apparent tail length, and it is shown at the correct position angle on the sky. This can be a great observing aid if you think you detect a possible faint tail and wonder if it is in a plausible direction (some comets have anti-tails, remember). The length of the tail shown is the length the tail would appear if it were actually 1/10 AU long. If the observed tail is half that long you know, then, that the physical length is 5 million miles long. The plotted tail is thus not a prediction, but it is a yardstick. - Another interesting question arises when plotting a comet path on a Day and Time mode star map. By definition a Day and Time mode map is for a particular day and time, yet also by definition, a comet path is extended over a period of time. How can the two be meaningfully combined? The method of display here is somewhat of an innovation, but I think it is a very helpful way to treat the data. On the Day and Time mode maps, two paths are shown: one follows the path of the comet relative to the stars, the other follows the path of the comet relative to the horizons. If the starting day for the ephemeris matches the date of the map, the two initial marks will coincide. But then, since the sky rotates over the plotted interval, the two paths diverge from there. The normal plot (plus mark with a tail) indicates the path relative to the stars. The other path is marked with X's. This is the path that for a given time of night shows when the comet will be highest above the horizon and how long it will remain in the observable portion of the sky. Some comets are "horizon huggers", so this information is critical to evaluating their potential visibility. >COMET PATHS FROM SPACE Comet Paths from Space When a comet ephemeris is generated with the "A" option (symmetric about perihelion) it is suitable for tracing out the whole orbit, or a significant portion of its inner orbit, as seen from a point off the earth. To create a sample orbit view follow this recipe: 1. Pick a comet and generate an ephemeris using day and time option A. Take all of the default settings from there on out. When asked for a file name, choose the default name (good for "scratchpad" storage) or choose a different file name. 2. Generate an Ecliptic Coordinate star map (Option C). Select by Coordinates (option B): any Longitude you want (0 is ok), but some negative angle (-25 would be good) for the Latitude. That is so you will be looking down on the solar system at an angle from above. The direction specified is the direction we are looking TOWARD. Take all the defaults for scale, projection, etc. (or choose the Gnomonic projection for somewhat better renditions of ellipses and parabolas). - 3. When the star map comes up choose Option 6 for comet paths, and select to see it from Space rather than earth. Take the default viewer distance (5 AUs is about the distance of Jupiter) and at the menu select the ephemeris you have just generated. 4. The sun will be plotted first, followed by a comet path. When the comet gets within 6 months of perihelion the earth will also kick in, so both will be orbiting the sun together. 5. Now comes the good part. Choose the F7 cursor option. The cursor should land on the sun and a box at the top left corner of the screen will say SUN. Typing the ENTER key, the cursor will jump sequentially to each position that was plotted, identifying the object and the date. To speed up the process type the END key to disable the identification box. (There is no mention of the END run option in the program itself; you have to learn it here.) Typing it again will bring the box back, but leave it off for now. Hold down the ENTER key for an animated view of the earth-comet encounter. The motion can be stopped and the END key typed to bring up a date at any point. 6. Several comets can be put on the screen simultaneously as long as the total number of points (counting heads, tails, sun and earth) does not exceed 500. If tails are left off, more comets can be included. >CLEARING Clearing Overlays The Planet and comet images on the video screen can be though of as overlays superimposed on a star base map. Typing F8 (twice for safety) clears the overlays without having to start the map computation from scratch You can thus experiment with various options without committing to them for the final printing. >3-D / LARGE AND SMALL 3-D / Large and Small Space is 3-dimensional. The sky we see is a two dimensional surface because of the limitations of our depth perception. At great distances all things look the same distance away, hence we seem to be at the center of a sphere. In other words, the sky is an illusion. It takes the illusion of stereo graphics to dispell the illusion of the sky. To see 3-D you need two points of view that are sufficiently far apart compared to the distances of the objects being viewed. In a room, normal eye spacing gives ample depth perception. Depth is easily judged 10 or 20 feet away by eyes that are about 2.5 inches apart: a factor of 50-100 eye spacings. Keep this in mind when it comes to plotting stereo views of the stars. A simulated "eye spacing" of a few tenths of a light year will bring out depth well into the distance among the stars. Over doing the eye separation is like trying to look at something an inch or two in front of your face. On the other hand, be flexible and experiment. See for yourself the difference changing the eye spacing makes and find your own favorite range. - To see 3-D you probably need a viewer. Some people can teach themselves to view the small scale 3-D views without a viewer, one eye looking at each frame, but the viewer makes the process much easier. The small scale 3-D views are limited by the actual spacing of human eyes: the squares can be no larger than the distance between the eyes. The small scale viewer that comes with the registered program helps focus each eye onto a separate picture. The brain fuses the information from the two slightly different flat pictures into a single 3-dimensional image. The large scale 3-D printouts are for use with a table-top viewer using mirrors. With the large viewer two 8-1/2 x 11 sheets can be viewed side-by- side for an incredible sensation of depth. It's like sticking your head into the universe. Some of the things to notice when viewing the stars in 3-D: --Some stars are bright because they are close, whereas others are bright because they are BRIGHT. --Some pairs of stars are close together in the sky but far apart in space. Other stars are far apart in the sky but close to each other (and us) in space. --Some familiar constellations contain actual star groupings, others only - apparent groupings. \ Besides viewing the stars in 3-D, try viewing the planets and comets in 3-D. When solar system objects are present the stars are flat in the background since they are so much farther away by comparison. Eye spacings are now specified in Astronomical Units (AUs) rather than light years. 1 AU is the distance from the earth to the sun. An AU is to a light year as an inch is to a mile (almost exactly!). Planets are really very local. Using the distance to eye spacing ratio of 50 or 100 as discussed above, a 3-D view looking at the sun and inner planets from the earth should require an eye separation of only about 0.01 to 0.02 AUs. 0.1 AU is adequate for viewing a comet orbit from the distance of Jupiter. When comets are seen in 3-D the main point of interest is the orientation of the orbits relative to the earth's orbital plane. Most of the solar system is flat, but comets come in from all angles. The inclinations stand out dramatically in this format. - The mechanics of getting the 3-D views is simple. For small scale 3-D hit F9. A square frame will appear on the screen. Zoom it in and out with the PgUp and PgDn keys and move it around with the Arrow keys. Make fine adjustments with the same keys in conjunction with the Shift key. Hit ENTER when the desired view has been selected. Whatever has been chosen will be scaled to a 2.5 inch format and printed in stereo. The large scale 3-D views are whole page printouts and are requested through the F10 printout option. Simply type F10 as printing normally, but answer yes to whether you want the printouts to be in 3-D. \ >PRINTOUTS Printouts To make printouts of a whole map or a zoomed view, display whatever features are desired on the video screen and then print by typing the F10 key. You will be asked whether you want the view in 3-D or flat. This would be for the large scale 3-D view printed out on two consecutive pages. If you have chosen a horizontal format and have the large viewer the two pages can be left attatched for viewing in stereo. Keep in mind that each picture in a stereo pair has points that are offset from their normal positions, so the 3-D option is inappropriate if you intend to use the printouts as finder charts at night. >