- Sun Apr 24, 2005 10:44 am
#18608
Hi again! 
I got some more ideas which i don't think been posted here yet.. so here they come.
The physical sky or more like the physical night sky should contain stars of various brightness and slightly shifting colors due to the atmosphere affecting the light they emit. Also at some locations on earth you can see the Milky Way on the sky as a blueish colorized band across the sky where the stars are denser and there's large amounts of gas. That would add to the realism of a night sky.
And more also that light pollution from bright lights or city lights dims out the stars so they're harder to see, and ofcourse on the coutryside as probably most of you all seen the starry nigthsky is much easier to see because the lightpollution is much less than it's in the cities.
These features might be over the top, like trying to hunt mosquitos with a anti-aircraft gun, but i think it's yet another part of the correct physical sky, this time at night
Thanks for all so far and keep up the great work on Maxwell!
/ Max

I got some more ideas which i don't think been posted here yet.. so here they come.
The physical sky or more like the physical night sky should contain stars of various brightness and slightly shifting colors due to the atmosphere affecting the light they emit. Also at some locations on earth you can see the Milky Way on the sky as a blueish colorized band across the sky where the stars are denser and there's large amounts of gas. That would add to the realism of a night sky.
And more also that light pollution from bright lights or city lights dims out the stars so they're harder to see, and ofcourse on the coutryside as probably most of you all seen the starry nigthsky is much easier to see because the lightpollution is much less than it's in the cities.
These features might be over the top, like trying to hunt mosquitos with a anti-aircraft gun, but i think it's yet another part of the correct physical sky, this time at night

Thanks for all so far and keep up the great work on Maxwell!
/ Max