Comment by dr_dshiv

Comment by dr_dshiv 10 days ago

4 replies

I love this.

It’s really easy to get lost in Space when you zoom out and back in after twisting. I can see the planets on the edge of the screen, but can never seem to find them again.

Reloading, of course, fixes all. But maybe some compass to click on to recenter on yourself (earth) like on google maps.

araes 10 days ago

Not surprisingly, this is actually one of the main issues with space travel and sending probes almost anywhere. Get slightly misasligned and you have take sightings on star patterns to try to somehow figure out where you are and what your orientation is. Voyager 1 and 2, Pioneer 10 and 11, and New Horizons all had / have variations on those systems.

Spacecraft Attitude Determination, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spacecraft_attitude_determinat...

Star Tracker, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Star_tracker

  • verzali 9 days ago

    I've had colleagues working on a pulsar navigation system to improve on star sightings.

    The idea is to look for the X-ray signals coming from pulsars and then use the frequency of the pulse to identify the pulsar and then match that to a known map to figure out where you are. It's pretty cool and theoretically can work even for interstellar spaceflight.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pulsar-based_navigation

  • dr_dshiv 10 days ago

    Not to mention the astroinertial guidance system on ICBM nuclear missiles.

    To wit, there are 12 Ohio class submarines each with 20 trident missiles each carrying 12 maneuverable nuclear warheads (475 kilotons each).

    The missiles are launched under water, reach Mach 18 in 2 minutes, and don’t need GPS — they use the stars to deliver their payload.

    I saw a test missile launch once before. It still terrifies me.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ohio-class_submarine

divbzero 10 days ago

Along the bottom toolbar there’s a “Reset” button (circular icon with an arrow) that recenters the UI.