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- S K Y G L O B E 3.6
-
-
-
-
- Congratulations and Welcome!!!
-
- You are now the proud owner of an evaluation copy of
- SkyGlobe 3.6, the fast, fun, and easy-to-use educational
- astronomy program.
-
- SkyGlobe is distributed as shareware to reach the widest
- possible audience, but it is still copyrighted material.
- You are granted permission to try out the program to see
- if you want to keep it and use it, and if you decide the
- program is worth the reasonable $20 fee, there are many easy
- ways to get in touch with us and many attractive incentives
- when you register.
-
- Also, you are encouraged to copy the entire shareware package
- and pass it around to anyone who may be interested, as long
- as you don't change any of the files and at the very most
- charge a small media and handling fee.
-
- This manual was converted almost directly from the printed
- version you will receive when you register, except for changes
- necessary for an ASCII file and for a non-registered copy.
- Other than that the text is the same, as is the .EXE.
-
- Installing and running SkyGlobe was designed to be fast
- and easy. All you need to do is copy all the files to a
- directory on your hard disk and invoke the .EXE. Here is a
- little script that will work for many systems; you may need
- to change some of the drive letters for your own, or to
- un-archive the files with PKUNZIP or something similar.
-
- C:
- CD \
- MD KLASSM
- CD KLASSM
- COPY A:*.*
- (Possibly PKUNZIP SKYGLOBE here or something similar.)
- SKYGLOBE
-
- That's all there is to it! Now you are ready to enjoy
- looking at the stars with SkyGlobe. The first few pages of
- this manual act as a Quick-start Introduction, the rest is
- a more detailed reference.
-
- Have fun, and Peace and Clear Skies!
-
- Mark A Haney
- Roscommon, MI
- -2-
-
- Table of Contents
-
- A SkyGlobe Overview......................................3
- Access SkyGlobe..........................................3
- Tour SkyGlobe with a Quick Tutorial......................3
- On-Screen Displays Will Guide You........................5
- When You Want to Exit....................................5
- What Are You Viewing?....................................5
- Seeing More Stars........................................6
- Z Is for Zoom............................................6
- Understand SkyGlobe's View Direction and Elevation.......6
- Change Direction and Elevation...........................7
- See a View at a Different Time or Date...................7
- Displaying Planets and Their Motions.....................8
- Adjust Lines and Labels.................................10
- Function Keys Control SkyGlobe Parameters...............12
- Miscellaneous Commands..................................13
- Use Special Command Modes...............................13
- Change View Location....................................14
- Find and Lock SkyGlobe Objects..........................15
- Displaying Images.......................................16
- Demonstrating Precession................................17
- Printing SkyGlobe Screens...............................18
- Displaying Custom Objects...............................18
- Change Your Default Environment.........................19
- Enter Exact Values......................................20
- SkyGlobe Q&A............................................20
- Explaining the Cycles...................................23
- Sources.................................................24
- Future Plans............................................25
- Our Support Policy......................................26
- ASP Ombudsman Statement.................................26
- Discerning Our Universe.................................26
- Glossary................................................28
- Copy of ORDER.TXT.......................................32
-
-
-
- Manual and SkyGlobe program Copyright (c) 1989-93 Mark A Haney
- SkyGlobe and CircumSpace are trademarks of KlassM Software, Inc.
- The GIF file format is copyrighted by CompuServe.
- All other trademarks are property of their respective owners,
- and are used purely for illustrative purposes.
-
- Files in SKYGLO36.ZIP:
-
- SKYGLOBE.EXE Main executable file
- SKYGLOBE.DAT Contains more stars and names, and RA-Dec lines
- SKYGLOBE.TXT This manual
- README Short loading, running, and registering info
- ORDER.TXT Convenient order form
- OVERSEAS.TXT International registration agents
- VENDOR.TXT Distribution instructions
- FILE_ID.DIZ Standard Description In ZIP
-
- -3-
-
- A SkyGlobe Overview
-
- SkyGlobe is a fast, fun, and easy-to-use educational
- astronomy program. With it, novice and experienced
- stargazers alike can view the heavens as they appear from
- their own Home Town or over two hundred other locations,
- and can compare a single location's celestial view from the
- current date, the ancient past, and the far-off future.
- Use SkyGlobe to see the effect of the Earth's 25,800-year
- wobble called precession, to practice celestial navigation,
- and to learn about planetary orbits. These activities aid
- in "Discerning Our Universe," the grounding philosophy of
- KlassM Software and the ultimate objective of SkyGlobe.
-
- This manual will help you discern SkyGlobe. This first
- section, Getting Introduced, is designed as a tutorial to
- get you to the stars as soon as possible. Take the SkyGlobe
- tour that begins on this page to become familiar with basic
- SkyGlobe features. Then turn to subsequent sections for
- more complete reference information. Refer to the Glossary
- for unfamiliar astronomical terms, and use the Table of
- Contents to help find information you're looking for.
-
-
- Access SkyGlobe
-
- At the SkyGlobe directory, type SKYGLOBE and press Enter.
- (For many installations, typing CD \KLASSM will get you to
- the right place.)
-
- A view of the southern sky for the current Time and Date
- appears, with a welcome and copyright message
- superimposed over the screen's top center. These messages
- disappear when you press the first command key.
-
-
- Tour SkyGlobe with a Quick Tutorial
-
- Navigating in SkyGlobe generally requires pressing only a
- single key. The following tutorial steps you through basic
- SkyGlobe actions, like changing the Time, Date, View
- Direction and Elevation, and others. Keys used during the
- tutorial are defined in your screen's upper right corner.
-
- 1. Press A to start the Auto-Increment of Time. Time
- (shown in the screen's upper left corner) begins to
- change forward in 5-minute increments and the display
- adjusts to reflect the new sky view.
- 2. Press Shift-A. Time changes backward in 5-minute
- increments.
- 3. To stop Time movements, press A again (as in Step 1).
- 4. Press the + key a few times and watch more stars
- appear.
- -4-
-
- 5. Press - and watch the dimmest stars vanish.
- 6. Press Z and then Shift-Z a few times to Zoom in and
- out. (Notice that using the Shift key with a command
- key reverses the action.)
- 7. Press M, H, D, or T to advance the Month, Hour, Day, or
- Time (in minutes). The view adjusts with each action.
- Time and Date in the screen's upper left corner also
- reflect your changes.
- 8. Try combining M, H, D, or T with the Shift key to
- reverse Time and Date changes (as in Shift-M).
- Note: You can also change Time by Year, Century, or
- milleniUm with Y, J (for Jump a century), or U.
- 9. Press N, S, E, or W to change your View Direction to
- North, South, East, or West. Not only does the sky view
- adjust instantly, but the direction indicator (Dir) in
- the screen's upper left corner shows your selected View
- Direction.
- 10. Press the up or down arrow keys, to change View
- Elevation by 5 degrees, or press PgUp or PgDn to change
- it in larger increments. The Elev indicator in the
- screen's upper left corner reflects your change.
- 11. SkyGlobe normally starts out with all possible
- Constellation lines displayed. Press Shift-C once or
- twice to decrease the number of these lines, then press
- C if you want to turn them back on. These lines are
- especially helpful to the novice just learning star
- patterns.
- 12. Function keys are used to toggle various display
- features, such as F10 for the constellation lines you
- just tinkered with. Try some of the others, and try
- using Alt, Shift, or Ctrl with them to adjust the way
- the associated feature is displayed.
- 13. Try viewing a specific planet, star, Deep Sky Object
- (DSO), or favorite constellation:
- Press F to display the Find menu.
- Use the mouse or arrow keys to highlight Orion in
- the list of planets, constellations, Messier
- objects, NGCs, and stars.
- Click on Orion or press Enter. The sky view adjusts
- to show Orion in the screen's center.
- 14. To Lock a planet in the screen's center, repeat Step 13
- but press L (or right-click) to select and Lock a
- planet (you choose) in the screen's center.
- 15. Turn on Auto-Increment mode again and watch the sky view
- adjust while the planet remains centered.
- (Remember, press A to stop.)
- 16. Press Esc to unLock the planet.
- 17. Try printing the displayed SkyGlobe screen: Just
- press P! (Then follow the instructions.)
-
- Feel free to go beyond the steps of this tutorial! Try
- some keys listed in the screen's upper right corner. Or try
- repeating the tutorial for some additional practice. More
- detailed descriptions of navigating with SkyGlobe command
- keys follow.
- -5-
-
- On-screen Displays Will Guide You
-
- SkyGlobe has several on-screen displays to help track where
- you are. Until you're familiar with SkyGlobe, we recommend
- using the program with these displays turned on.
-
- Parameter Display. The Parameter display in the top left
- corner tracks your Time, Date, Location, View Direction,
- Elevation, and Zoom factor. Press F2 to toggle this
- display, or Shift-F2 to list Auto-Increment parameters,
- Print parameters, and other information. You can press
- Ctrl-F2 to erase one portion of the display at a time.
- (The Parameter display is more fully described below.)
-
- Help Display. The Help display in the top right corner
- lists SkyGlobe alphabetic and function keys for initiating
- all SkyGlobe commands. Press F1 to toggle this display, or
- Shift-F1 to display function key assignments (on non-CGA
- machines).
-
- Mouse Cursor Display. The Mouse Cursor display in the
- screen's bottom left corner lists the cursor Azimuth and
- Altitude (the direction and sky height of the cursor),
- RA-Dec coordinates, and the name and magnitude (if a star)
- of any object under the cursor.
-
-
- When You Want to Exit
-
- It's hard for us to imagine ever wanting to exit SkyGlobe,
- but if you find it necessary to do so just press Q, Esc, or
- Alt-X to return to DOS.
-
-
- What Are You Viewing?
-
- Lots and lots of stars! Depending on your View Location
- and the current time and date, you will also see various
- constellation lines, some of the planets, a green line
- representing the Horizon, RA-Dec coordinate grid lines, and
- a red dotted Ecliptic line for the Sun's path. The globe
- appears as if you're looking through a fish-eye lens.
- -6-
-
- Seeing More Stars
-
- As the tutorial in Getting Introduced demonstrates, you can
- use the + and - keys to control the number of stars to display.
- You can see the number of stars from which the program is
- currently selecting in the upper left Parameter display,
- followed by the limiting magnitude this number represents.
- This is the magnitude of the dimmest stars shown.
-
- Assuming SKYGLOBE.DAT is present, you should be able to
- display over 29,000 stars, up to magnitude 5.6. Registered
- users are able to purchase a $5 optional disk that increases
- this total to 250,000 stars, the entire SAO catalog.
-
-
- Z Is for Zoom
-
- SkyGlobe allows you to adjust the magnification of your sky
- view with the Zoom feature. At a nominal magnification of
- 1, half of the celestial sphere is visible. Because the eye
- can focus on far less area than this, a certain amount of
- distortion is evident at low magnifications. The center of
- the screen is always the most accurate portion.
-
- Press Z (Zoom) to increase the magnification or Shift-Z to
- decrease it. You can use Alt-Z and Ctrl-Z to Zoom in larger
- and smaller increments (respectively). Home followed by Z
- quickly sets the magnification to 1.0, and End-Z or End
- followed by Shift-Z is used to rapidly step through zoom
- levels.
-
-
- Understand SkyGlobe's View Direction and Elevation
-
- To understand what you're viewing, you need to understand
- how SkyGlobe interprets directions and elevations. Sky-
- Globe assumes you're standing outside looking in the same
- direction your feet are pointing. This is the View
- Direction. The display shows this direction in degrees,
- ranging from 0 for due north, through 180 degrees for due
- south, to 350 degrees for 10 degrees west of north. The
- View Direction is indicated by degrees in the screen's
- upper left corner as well as by initials (N, S, etc.)
- along the Horizon line.
-
- The View Elevation ranges from 0 degrees to 90. The Horizon
- appears as a straight line at the 0-degree setting. Imagine
- that you're extremely short, so the ground covers the lower
- half of your vision, but is transparent. The 90-degree
- setting is like looking straight overhead at the Zenith.
- -7-
-
- Change Direction and Elevation
-
- SkyGlobe provides many convenient methods for rapidly
- changing the sky view. The up and down arrow keys change
- the View Elevation by 5 degrees. The left and right arrow
- keys work with the View Direction. When the View Elevation
- is near the Horizon, these keys work side-to-side as you
- expect, but nearer to the Zenith they rotate the view more
- than they move it. This is correct when you remember the
- View Direction stands for where your feet are pointing.
-
- You can also use these keys to change Direction and
- Elevation:
-
- Alt-arrow, Ctrl-arrow Change Direction or Elevation by
- small amounts
- N, S, E, or W Change Direction instantly to
- compass points
- PgUp, PgDn Change Elevation in larger jumps
-
-
- See a View at a Different Time or Date
-
- SkyGlobe provides many ways to adjust a view's Time or
- Date.
-
- Using Alphabetic Keys. Using SkyGlobe's alphabetic keys,
- Time can be changed forward or backward by a minute or an
- hour. The Date can be changed forward or backward by a day,
- month, year, century, or millenium.
-
- Use the following alphabetic keys to change Time or Date:
-
- To Change Forward Backward
- 1 Minute T Shift-T
- 1 Hour H Shift-H
- 1 Day D Shift-D
- 1 Month M Shift-M
- 1 Year Y Shift-Y
- 1 Century J Shift-J
- 1 MilleniUm U Shift-U
-
- Note: Press Home-Y to return to the current year at any
- time.
-
- Using Auto-Increment Mode. Auto-Increment mode, one of
- SkyGlobe's most useful features, simulates the passage of
- Time on your computer. Once activated, it automatically
- and continuously increments Time or Date, either forward
- or backward, until it's turned off.
- -8-
-
- Several parameters control Auto-Increment behavior. By
- default, the program increments the Time, by 5 minutes per
- view. If you switch to increment by Date, the program
- defaults to a speed of 1 day. Increments are usually
- forward, but you can set SkyGlobe to move backwards too.
-
- You can see the current settings by pressing Shift-F2 until
- all values are displayed. The parameter names are
- AutoTspeed, AutoDspeed, AutoType, and AutoDir. Use the
- table below to make changes.
-
- Press this Key To Do this
- A Toggle Auto-Increment mode on and off
- Shift-A Toggle Auto-Increment forward and backward
- Alt-A Toggle Auto-Increment between Time and Date
- > Increase Auto-Increment speed
- < Decrease Auto-Increment speed
-
- Setting Real-Time Mode. To synchronize Time and Date to the
- system clock, press R to activate (or deactivate) Real-Time
- mode. The letter R in Time display indicates that Real-Time
- mode is activated. You still have control over all commands
- except those related to Time and Date.
-
- Using Sidereal Day As Auto-Increment Speed. Press Shift-R
- to set the Auto-Increment speed to one Sidereal day, which
- is one complete Earth rotation, or about 23 hours and 56
- minutes. The star and constellation display seem to freeze,
- although planets continue along the Ecliptic. This is
- useful for learning about retrograde motion and about a
- planet's relative speed of motion. Press Shift-R again
- to deactivate Sidereal Day Auto-Increment mode.
-
-
- Displaying Planets and their Motions
-
- You can use SkyGlobe to learn how planets move around the
- Sun. Follow these steps to display planets and their
- orbits.
-
- 1. Press F3 to toggle display of planets and their labels.
- EGA/VGA color users see the planets in more or less
- appropriate colors. You may need to change the Time or
- Date to see your favorite planet.
- 2. Change the View Direction to South and the Time to
- 12:00 noon.
- 3. Press V to turn off Daylight Savings Time. If D
- doesn't appear next to Time in the Parameter display,
- Daylight Savings Time is off.
- 4. If necessary, press Alt-A to set the Auto-Increment
- Type to Date.
- 5. If the Ecliptic isn't displayed, press F6.
- 6. Press A and watch the show!
- -9-
-
- While watching the display, note these points:
-
- Because your Location may not fall exactly on the
- standard time zone meridian, the Sun may not be due
- South for you at Civil noon.
-
- Notice how the Sun wanders from side to side of the
- meridian throughout the year as Earth speeds up and
- slows down along its slightly elliptical orbit.
-
- Mercury and Venus stay close to the Sun. Mars exhibits
- strange behavior because it's outside the Earth's orbit
- but relatively close by. It also has an eccentric orbit.
- Other outside planets drift more slowly against the
- background of the stars.
-
- Watch the change in the Moon's icon to see how it goes
- through its phases, being always in New Moon phase when
- near the Sun. Move to Midnight and the Moon will be in
- Full Moon phase when it shows up in the South.
-
- Because the Moon's orbit is inclined about 5 degrees
- to the Ecliptic, it wanders above and below the Ecliptic
- each month. This motion, which rotates through an 18-
- year cycle, accounts for the near periodicity of
- eclipses. For example, take a look at the solar eclipse
- of July 11, 1991. Slowly step through the hours and
- watch how the moon gradually overtakes the Sun.
-
-
- The Sidereal day mode of the Auto-Increment feature
- provides another interesting way to watch the motion
- of planets. Find a direction and a Time and Date that
- contain some planets and press Shift-R. The Time begins
- incrementing by 23 hours and 56 minutes, or one sidereal
- day. The planets, especially the Sun, Moon, and inner
- planets, begin to drift against the unmoving background
- of the stars.
-
- Shift-F3 and Ctrl-F3 decide whether labels are displayed
- or planets only. Alt-F3 switches the entire display from
- an Earth-based sky view to a bird's-eye view of the solar
- system. Time, Date, and all Auto commands will still be
- active in the mode, as will Zoom and some mouse features.
- -10-
-
- Adjust Lines and Labels
-
- SkyGlobe can quickly and easily change the lines and labels
- that help your eyes and mind make sense of the sky's
- vastness. This can be very helpful to the novice just
- learning the stars. If you want to save any combination of
- lines and labels as a default, see Customizing SkyGlobe.
-
- Adjusting Constellation Lines. The Constellation lines are
- grouped by importance, with some constellations having
- several classes of lines, such as the extra lines that
- change the Big Dipper into Ursa Major, the Great Bear.
- Press Shift-C to reduce the number of lines displayed, and
- C alone to restore them. Press F10 to instantly turn on or
- off these lines. Turning the lines on and off is a good way
- to learn the star patterns underneath the constellations.
-
- Press G (Guidelines) to toggle constellation boundary lines
- on and off. Press Shift-G to change the color of these
- lines, and Alt-G to select between dotted and solid lines.
- The International Astronomical Union (IAU) standardized
- these boundaries, which are similar to state or county
- borders, so every star or object could be said to belong to
- a particular constellation. SkyGlobe's lines are a little
- rough to save memory, like a cheap TV weather map, so once
- in a great while a star might show up in the wrong "county".
-
- Labeling Constellations. You can also label the
- constellations in several ways. Press F9 to toggle labels,
- or Alt-F9 to activate several labeling options: no labels,
- abbreviations, full names in small font, full names in
- large font.
-
- Labeling Stars. The 3216 brightest stars (up to magni-
- tude 5.6) can be labeled with names or their rank order
- brightness numbers. Press F8 to toggle, and Alt-F8 to
- activate several labeling options: no labels, numbers,
- names in small font, names in large font. Use F8 with
- Shift and Ctrl, or use F12, to control the number of
- stars labeled.
-
- Displaying Horizon, Zenith, and Hash-Marks, and Ecliptic.
- Press F5 to toggle the display of Horizon line, Zenith
- cross, and Hash-Marks, and use Shift and Ctrl to select
- the type of display.
- -11-
-
- Displaying RA-Dec Grid Lines. F7 controls two levels of
- display for RA-Dec grid lines. These lines act somewhat
- like latitude and longitude lines on the Earth's globe.
- (RA-Dec stands for Right Ascension and Declination, the
- astronomical analogues of terrestrial longitude and
- latitude.) Try looking due North in Auto-Increment mode
- with the lines on and watch the celestial sphere rotate.
- Notice that the Pole Star appears almost motionless.
- F6 toggles the Ecliptic line display. In both cases,
- the Alt key selects between dotted and solid lines.
-
- Viewing Messier Objects. Press F4 to display Messier
- Objects--110 Deep Sky Objects compiled by Charles Messier
- to distinguish them from comets--and a selection of NGC
- objects. Press Alt-F4 to label these objects with their
- names; Shift and Ctrl determine how many to display. The
- different types of objects are: open clusters, globular
- clusters, nebulas, spiral galaxies, and elliptical
- galaxies.
-
- Displaying the Milky Way. The K key controls a beautiful
- representation of the MilKy Way. The key alone toggles,
- while Shift selects between several display options: no
- display, outlines only, gray-shaded regions, blue-shaded
- regions. Press Alt-K (VGA and SVGA only) to adjust the
- total brightness of the shaded regions, while Ctrl-K
- adjusts the difference between them.
-
- Outlining the SkyGlobe Display. The letter O places a
- frame around the rectangular screen and the round SkyGlobe.
- Press O to activate several outlining options: no display,
- rectangular frame, round frame, round frame and rectangular
- frame. Press Shift-O to change the color of the outlines
- (there are 13 displayable colors). Alt-O toggles display
- of field of view circles, with Ctrl-O selecting between
- 1/2 degree, 1-degree, and 2-degree circles, to assist in
- simulating a telescopic eyepiece view.
-
- Star Display Options. There are several combinations of
- displays available for the star display. SkyGlobe starts
- out with almost the brightest possible settings, but you
- can use Shift-B and Ctrl-B to decrease either the type or
- color of the star display if you prefer a subtler effect,
- perhaps for a darkened room. Use B and Alt-B to select
- brighter options. These are among the settings that
- can be saved with configuration files, as described
- in the Customizing SkyGlobe section.
- -12-
-
- Function Keys Control SkyGlobe Parameters
-
- The following function keys are used to control SkyGlobe
- parameters:
-
- This Key Allows You to
- F1 Control the Help display
- F2 Control the Parameter display
- F3 Display Planets
- F4 Display Messier objects and DSOs
- F5 Display Horizon, Zenith, and Hash-Marks
- F6 Display the Ecliptic line
- F7 Display the RA-Dec grid
- F8 Label stars
- F9 Label constellations
- F10 Control constellation lines display
- F11 Control the Mouse Cursor display
- F12 Control the number of labeled stars
-
- Combining the Alt, Shift, and Ctrl keys with function keys
- F1 through F10 allows you to do more than just toggle the
- associated display features, which is what using the
- function keys alone does. In most cases, use the Shift
- key to increase the level of the display, use the Ctrl
- key to decrease it, and use the Alt key to change the
- type of display.
-
- For instance, Alt-F7 selects between dotted and solid lines
- for the RA-Dec grid, Shift-F4 increases the number of
- Messiers and DSOs while Alt-F4 controls whether the object
- name is displayed, etc.
-
- F11 and F12 aren't present on all machines, nor do they
- always work the same way, so their functions are duplicated
- through other means. The Insert key is a synonym for F11,
- and Shift-F8 is a synonym for F12, with Ctrl-F8 used for
- Shift-F12. The F12 operation is more similar to alphabetic
- command keys than it is to function keys, and works that
- way to remain compatible with earlier versions of SkyGlobe.
- -13-
-
- Miscellaneous Commands
-
- Here are several other useful keys, most not previously
- described.
-
- These Keys Allow You to
-
- Enter Begin Enter exact value mode
- Backspace Undo your last keystroke
- TAB Find the next sunrise or sunset, depending
- on the situation
- " (as in ditto) Repeat last keystroke
- / Brighten text of on-screen displays
- . (period) Toggle between normal and reversed text
- [ Toggle Precession Flag
- V Toggle Daylight Savings Time (Shift-V forces
- its use.) SkyGlobe tries to determine when
- Daylight Savings Time should be active,
- depending on the Location and Date. Before
- 1918 Daylight Savings Time isn't usually
- active, because it wasn't widely used then.
- X Switch to mirror image display
- Alt-F Flip hemisphere
- Alt-T Toggle Time display, either AM/PM or 24-hour
- Ctrl-N Restrict the stars and planets displayed to
- only those used for celestial navigation
- Ctrl-G Toggle backGround color between black/blue
- Ctrl-T Toggle Twilight background brighten mode
-
-
- Use Special Command Modes
-
- The SPACE bar, Home and End keys, and Alt and Ctrl keys
- have special meaning in SkyGlobe. These command modes make
- SkyGlobe even easier to use!
-
- SPACE Bar. The SPACE bar activates Turbo mode, which takes
- the next keypress and continually feeds it to the program
- until the SPACE bar is pressed again. This feature is
- useful with Zoom, Direction, and Time and Date commands.
- Try it with J or U while facing North to see a great
- demonstration of precession. (Precession is described in
- more detail in Demonstrating Precession.)
-
- Home and End Keys. The Home and End keys, for many
- commands, take the next keypress and either minimize the
- program parameter altered by that key, or jump to its next
- major increment. These are helpful for Zoom and Brightness
- and are convenient ways to set the Time and Date to even
- numbers, such as midnight, January 1, or the current year.
-
- Alt and Ctrl Keys. The Alt and Ctrl keys often work as
- smaller positive and negative increments for the command
- with which they are used. Once again, Zoom and direction
- commands work well with these keys.
- -14-
-
- Try Using Special Command Modes. Try an example that
- illustrates these command modes:
-
- 1. Press Home and, when prompted for the Home key, press
- Z. This resets the Zoom factor to 1.
- 2. To use Turbo mode, press the SPACE bar and, when
- prompted, press an alphabetic key to change Time, Date,
- or Zoom. Your request continually feeds and
- incrementally changes the sky view. A message at the
- screen's bottom reminds you to press the SPACE bar
- when you want to exit Turbo mode.
- 3. Try Turbo mode again for a reverse Zoom: Press the
- SPACE bar and then press Alt-Z. The display begins
- to expand.
- 4. Try it again! In Step 3, try pressing Ctrl-arrow or
- Alt-arrow when in Turbo mode.
-
- Mouse Alternatives. You can use the mouse as a shortcut
- instead of the keyboard in some situations. Moving the
- mouse cursor to the edge of the screen is similar to using
- the arrow keys, and it will slide the display in the
- appropriate direction. If the Help display is on, you can
- click, right-click, double-click, or right-double-click on
- top of those descriptions to activate the appropriate
- command key, or its Shift, Alt, or Ctrl state respectively.
-
-
- Change View Location
-
- A popular pastime for new astronomers is seeing what the
- sky looks like from other places. Maybe you're planning to
- move and want to be sure the stars will make interesting
- viewing from your new prospective home. (They will!)
- You can change your View Location in several ways.
-
- Using the Location Menu. Press L to display a menu of
- Locations from which to choose. You current view remains at
- the bottom of the screen. Use the cursor keys and press
- Enter (or the mouse) to select any Location listed. You'll
- return to the program with all other parameters just the
- way you left them. Because SkyGlobe has over 230 Locations,
- there are two pages of Locations to choose from. Press End
- to quickly move to the end of a page, then press Enter to
- view the next page.
-
- Using Function Keys. Press Home-L, End-L, Alt-L, and Ctrl-L
- to change Locations without using the menu. The first two
- select the first Location on the menu, usually Caledonia,
- Michigan or your hometown, and the Equator. The last two
- move either one down or up on the menu.
-
- Changing by Compass Direction. To move a small amount in a
- compass direction, press Alt-N, Alt-S, Alt-E, or Alt-W. The
- east and west moves have the effect of changing the local
- time by 1 minute of Time, which corresponds to 15 minutes
- of longitude. The north-south changes are 1/4 degree, about
- 17 miles.
- -15-
-
- Find and Lock SkyGlobe Objects
-
- Suppose you want to view a particular planet, constellation,
- Deep Sky Object, or favorite star. You can find and display
- objects in several ways--by menu and by mouse. You can also
- lock these images so they remain centered despite Time and
- Date changes.
-
- Finding an Object with the Find Menu. Follow these steps
- to use the Find menu:
-
- 1. Press F (or click on F in the Help display) to display
- the Find menu. The menu displays. On several pages, it
- lists planets, constellations, Messier objects, NGCs,
- and stars.
- 2. Navigate the menu using arrow keys, PgUp, PgDn, or the
- mouse.
- 3. Press Enter or left-click when your desired object
- highlights. The SkyGlobe display re-centers at the
- chosen object if it is visible from your latitude. If
- necessary, Time increments until the object is above
- the Horizon. The next time you use the Find menu, the
- last chosen object will be automatically highlighted.
- 4. Now try Locking an object in the screen's center by
- repeating Steps 1 and 2, then selecting the object by
- pressing L (or right-clicking). The object is now
- Locked in the center. If you don't Lock your object,
- Time and Date changes cause the object to move around
- on the screen. SkyGlobe may need to adjust the View
- Direction and Elevation to allow the object to remain
- centered.
- 5. Try changing Date or Time and observe how the Locked
- object remains centered. SkyGlobe's animation works
- great in conjunction with Locking mode.
- 6. At any time, press Esc to unLock the object.
-
-
- Finding an Object Using the Mouse. Rather than using the
- Find menu, you can directly identify many stars by placing
- the mouse cursor over them. If they are among the brightest
- 3,216 (through magnitude 5.6), their name appears in the
- lower left-hand corner along with their magnitude display.
-
- You can also use the mouse to re-center the display, to
- Lock on an object or a sky position, and to display images
- for objects. Click to instantly change the direction and
- elevation so the position under the mouse cursor will
- become the new center of the display. Right click to lock
- the position or object under the cursor. The chosen object
- remains at the screen's center if possible for your
- Location, regardless of time changes, until you press Esc.
-
- Double-click to display an image of a planet or DSO, if
- one is available for that object. See the next section
- for more about images.
- -16-
-
- Displaying Images
-
- If a .PCX or .GIF file is present for your chosen object,
- you can display the image by double-clicking on the object,
- or by pressing I while in the Find menu. The file can be
- in the directory you used for SkyGlobe (usually KLASSM), or
- you can use a SET command in your AUTOEXEC.BAT to direct
- the program to search for image files in another directory.
-
- Here is the set path command I use:
- SET SGIMAGE=C:\ASTROGIF\SKYGLOBE
- The portion up to and including the = must not be changed,
- but the rest depends on your own hard drive and directory
- structure.
-
- SkyGlobe can display properly named 16 or 256-color .PCX or
- .GIF files on VGA or better displays up to 1024x768. The
- most common image format and video mode will be
- 640x480x256, and normal left-clicking will use that mode if
- the program detects that your card will support it. If a
- smaller mode will do, the program will use that mode
- instead.
-
- If a higher-resolution mode would be better, you can use
- right-clicking instead to let the program use the mode it
- thinks is most appropriate for the image and your system.
- While SkyGlobe checks your card to see what resolutions are
- supported, it can't tell what kind of monitor is hooked up.
- The combination most likely to cause trouble is a 1024x768
- image, a video card that will handle that resolution,
- hooked to a monitor that can't.
-
- It is possible to have up to twenty-two different image
- files displayed for any given object. These images can be
- from any source, as long as they are properly named, or you
- can purchase a few selections from us. Use the name alone,
- or add a prefix numeral from 0-9, as shown below:
-
- Object Sample File Name
- Planet SATURN.PCX
- Messier object M31.GIF
- NGC N1365.GIF or N40.PCX
- Prefixed planet 0JUPITER.GIF or 9MARS.PCX
- Prefixed NGC 3N7000.GIF
-
- There have been sporadic reports of problems displaying
- images under Windows Enhanced mode on some systems. I'm
- still tracking this one down, but hopefully by the time
- you read this it will have been fixed! (First I have to
- be able to make the problem happen on my machine enough
- to figure it out.) If you have trouble yourself, you may
- want to run SkyGlobe exclusively from DOS or in Standard
- mode. I'm also working on a real Windows version, that of
- course will have no Windows compatibility problems!
-
- -17-
-
- Demonstrating Precession
-
- A pattern that is difficult to explain with words but which
- lends itself perfectly to SkyGlobe's animation features is
- the 25,800-year wobble of the Earth's axis called
- precession. We think of the North Star as constant and
- unchanging--Shakespeare wrote that this is so!--but it is
- in fact a lucky accident that Polaris, a second-magnitude
- star, is currently so very close to the celestial north
- pole.
-
- (SkyGlobe trivia: Polaris used to be the defining star of
- the magnitude scale until it was discovered to be slightly
- variable. It was set exactly equal to magnitude 2.0 and all
- other brightnesses were compared to it using a logarithmic
- scale.)
-
- Our North Star will gradually come even closer than its
- current 3/4-degree to the actual pole until about 2100,
- when it will start to draw away. Future stargazers will use
- stars such as Errai, Alderamin, Deneb, Delta Cygni, Vega,
- Thuban, and Kochab as their North Stars, as well as some
- lesser-known lights. The pattern will begin to reappear in
- about 27900 AD, when Polaris will again be very close to
- the pole. The same sequence extends into the past.
-
- Enough talk about precession; follow these steps to see it!
-
- 1. Find a view where the celestial north pole is easy to
- see. You can do this in one of several ways:
-
- Press N to instantly choose a View Direction of
- North and use the Zoom feature and up or down arrows
- to select a view that displays the coming together
- of the RA-Dec lines at the pole.
-
- Press F and use the Find menu to locate Polaris. You
- may find it helpful to change your latitude with Alt-
- N or Alt-S to an even number so the pole falls on
- top of a hash-mark.
-
- Change your Location to the North Pole and look
- toward the Zenith.
-
- 2. Press the SPACE bar to start Turbo mode and select U
- to continually increment the Date by one milleniUm.
- Polaris and the RA-Dec coordinates for the current
- epoch start to spin off to the side and the North
- Stars come in from the other side.
-
- Note: In Step 2, you can press J to Jump by a century
- instead of a milleniUm. The algorithm that precesses the
- view gets a little slow for faraway Dates, especially
- without a math coprocessor, so you want large Time changes.
- Combining J or U with the Shift key (Shift-J or Shift-U)
- allows you to view reverse precession.
- -18-
-
- Starting precession with the mouse on top of the old pole
- helps to show the changes happening. The RA-Dec coordinates
- stay fairly near to 90 degrees Declination (with some
- error) while Polaris gets farther away. If you move the
- mouse cursor on top of Polaris again--you should turn off
- Turbo for this--notice from the displayed RA-Dec coordinates
- that Polaris is no longer near the new celestial pole.
-
- SkyGlobe is limited to about one precession cycle in each
- direction--forward or backward--because it gets pretty slow
- going toward the endpoints. The planets still display
- throughout this range, but we wouldn't plan a trip to them
- based on these coordinates. Their coordinates are
- approximately correct for as far back and forward as we
- have data. We've followed the astronomical convention of
- using the Julian calendar backward indefinitely, although
- our month names weren't in use tens of thousands of years
- ago.
-
- Precession is toggled with the [ key, which is conveniently
- placed next to the P key it would have made sense to use if
- it weren't needed for printing. Since precession doesn't
- cause any noticeable problems or differences for years
- anywhere near the present, and since the program default is
- for it to be turned on, there should be no need for you to
- turn it off except to see the difference. If you have any
- trouble with the preceding examples, though, you might want
- to make sure you didn't accidentally turn it off by using
- Shift-F2 to turn on all the parameter displays.
-
-
- Displaying Custom Objects
-
- If an exciting new comet or supernova should appear in our
- skies, you can add its position to the SkyGlobe display and
- determine when and where it will appear each night. The
- file SKYGLOBE.EXT can contain up to 10 custom objects, in
- which each line has RA (in decimal hours) followed by a
- space followed by Dec (in decimal degrees including sign if
- necessary) followed by the name, which should have no spaces.
-
-
- Printing SkyGlobe Screens
-
- To print a copy of any SkyGlobe screen, simply press P.
- You will then be asked to select a type of printout, and
- following that selection, directed to choose either LPT1
- or LPT2.
-
- Regardless of your video type, an image is created in VGA
- resolution for dot-matrix printers or SVGA resolution for
- HP-compatible laser printers. For dot matrix printers, line
- feeds are normally inserted, but you can change this with
- Alt-P.
- -19-
-
- Change Your Default Environment
-
- SkyGlobe can customize many program settings and save them
- as either the new program default or special views.
-
- Saving and Loading Settings. Use SkyGlobe's number keys to
- save current settings. Up to 10 different settings can be
- saved, one of which will be used as the new program
- default. These number keys create the file SKYGLOBE.CF#,
- where # is a digit 0 through 9. When SkyGlobe starts, it
- looks for the .CF0 file for its initial settings. If you
- would rather use the standard default settings, DELete or
- REName this file or start SkyGlobe by typing SKYGLOBE N. If
- you want to start SkyGlobe using one of the other settings
- files, just type SKYGLOBE #, such as SKYGLOBE 4 to use
- SKYGLOBE.CF4.
-
- This scheme allows you to use batch files, such as
- ECLIPSE.BAT = SKYGLOBE 1, where SKYGLOBE.CF1 has been
- previously set up by you for July 11, 1991. These
- parameters can be mixed with video choices (see below),
- as long as you separate the parameters with spaces.
-
- To retrieve a configuration file while the program is
- running, hold down the Shift key while pressing the
- appropriate number key. Shift-0 will load your own personal
- default settings, if you have any, or you can press I for
- Initialize and accomplish the same thing. If you earlier
- pressed the 1 key to save an eclipse configuration,
- pressing Shift-1 (which is the same as !) will bring it back.
-
- Shift-I will bring in the normal Initialization setting the
- program will use if you don't have have a .CF0 file, or if
- you start up with SkyGlobe N. You may find this easier than
- DELeting or RENaming that file, or for occasional use.
- SkyGlobe saves the exit state of the program every time you
- quit. To retrieve this configuration file, start SkyGlobe
- with SKYGLOBE I, or press Alt-I at any time during the next
- run.
-
- SkyGlobe automatically detects your video adapter, and runs
- in VGA if possible. If for some reason you would like to
- try lesser modes, start the program with SKYGLOBE H for
- Hercules, SKYGLOBE C for CGA, SKYGLOBE E for EGA, or
- SKYGLOBE M if you want to force monochrome output. Mono
- mode is normally only used if there is a severe lack of
- available memory, since laptops these days do a good job
- of gray-scaling color video modes.
-
- If you have an SVGA video adapter and would prefer an
- 800x600x16 sky view, simply use the starting command
- SKYGLOBE S. If there is enough memory, and your card is
- among the many now supported by the program, you should
- then enjoy finer details and less obtrusive text. If for
- any reason the display fails to properly appear, probably
- pressing Esc will safely return you to DOS, where the
- normal SKYGLOBE command will give the 640x480 VGA view.
- -20-
-
- Enter Exact Values
-
- You can enter exact values for many parameters by pressing
- the Enter key and then filling in values on the text menu.
- You can skip entries if you don't want to change them at
- this time, although there are some interactions. You have
- to enter both RA and Dec if you enter one, and you can't
- change both Elev-Dir and RA-Dec, since the SkyGlobe can't
- center on two places at once.
-
-
- SkyGlobe Q&A
-
- How can I speed up SkyGlobe?
-
- This question has several answers. The first method
- involves asking SkyGlobe to do less work. Try turning off
- everything you can do without, especially the Milky Way,
- dim stars, the RA-Dec lines, the planets, and Messiers and
- DSOs. In addition, determining the location of the mouse
- cursor can be a slow operation, so you may want to turn it
- off by using Insert or F11.
-
- Of course, if you find the program too fast as some people
- do, simply reverse the process and treat yourself to more
- stars and other features.
-
- Another method applies to Auto-Increment mode. SkyGlobe
- starts out changing the view 5 minutes at a time. You can
- increase this rate by pressing >. Another way is to change
- the increment type to Date mode by pressing Alt-A, then
- increase the Date increment rate by pressing >.
-
- Finally, you can use several helpful keyboard shortcuts to
- quickly create the view you desire. Turbo mode, which is
- started by pressing the SPACE bar, takes your next
- keystroke and continually repeats it, as if you were
- pressing it yourself. Use this to zoom in with Z or Alt-Z,
- then sit back and watch it happen, instead of deciding how
- many Zs to press. When you are satisfied, just press the
- SPACE bar again. Try this with Alt-arrow keys, or Ctrl-
- arrows, because all keyboards aren't the same. It's also
- convenient for Turbo-H or Turbo-M if you really want to get
- to a Time or Date in a hurry.
- -21-
-
- The Home and End keys can save a lot of time as well. They
- generally go immediately to the minimum value of a command
- or feature for Home, and to the next major increment for
- End. With Time or Date commands, this is the quickest way
- to go to midnight or noon, or the 1st or 15th of the month,
- or January or July. End-+ a few times is the quickest way
- to turn on all the stars. Home-Z is the quickest way to
- return to the minimum Zoom and you can follow it with SPACE-
- Z to get to some moderate value.
-
- For changing direction quickly, you can't beat the N, S, E,
- and W direction commands. PgUp and PgDn can change the View
- Elevation faster than single arrow commands. Use the mouse
- button to quickly recenter the display at the position of
- the mouse cursor. And you can use Find to center the
- display at a particular object, instead of figuring out
- how to get there with the right combination of arrow keys.
-
-
- Is there a version of SkyGlobe for the Macintosh?
-
- Because so much of SkyGlobe depends on assembly language
- programming, porting the program to the Macintosh would be
- a major undertaking. There are no immediate plans for a
- Macintosh version. There are still too many improvements
- to be made in the DOS world!
-
-
- Why does the display sometimes jump?
-
- Jumps are usually due to Daylight Savings Time becoming
- active or inactive. SkyGlobe currently uses U.S. average
- dates for Daylight Savings Time (summer time) in Northern
- Hemisphere Locations, and common Australian dates for the
- Southern Hemisphere. Policies vary from year to year and
- place to place. Although it was Ben Franklin who first
- proposed Daylight Savings Time, it wasn't widely used in
- the U.S. until WWI in 1918. Therefore, even for Locations
- that customarily use Daylight Savings Time today, it is
- usually deactivated before that date.
-
- At any time, you can force Daylight Savings Time with
- Shift-V. If it's active when you don't want it, press V
- to deactivate it.
-
- The display also jumps during the changeover from the
- Julian to the Gregorian calendar. This took place at
- many different times in different countries, but SkyGlobe
- assumes that October 4, 1582, was followed by October 15,
- 1582.
- -22-
-
- Why can't I see more than 3216 (magnitude 5.6) stars?
-
- SKYGLOBE.EXE is the only file that is absolutely necessary
- in order to run SkyGlobe. If you wish to see more than 3216
- stars, you will need the file SKYGLOBE.DAT in the same
- directory as SKYGLOBE.EXE. This increases the dataset total
- to over 29,000 stars (magnitude 7.6)
-
- If you have decide to purchase the extended star database,
- the two files SKYGLOBE.DT1 and SKYGLOBE.DT2 increase the
- number of stars to over 250,000. You will still need the
- SKYGLOBE.DAT file.
-
-
- Why does the time change sometimes when I Find an object?
-
- If the desired object is not currently above the Horizon,
- but will be sometime during the next 24 hours, Time
- automatically increments until the object clears the
- Horizon. Perhaps you're more interested in the Date that an
- object appears over the Horizon for a given time. You can
- use Sidereal Time mode to your advantage here, but there's
- currently no way to select for Date instead of Time or to
- defeat the Auto-Increment feature.
-
-
- Why won't SkyGlobe run in color on my system?
-
- This question has two answers. Many people with color CGA
- systems expect SkyGlobe to run in color on their systems.
- Unfortunately, CGA color mode resolution is only 320x200,
- which is insufficient to produce the high-quality display
- SkyGlobe requires.
-
- Those with EGA or better displays may be equally dismayed
- if SkyGlobe displays in monochrome mode. This is due to a
- lack of available memory. A message to that effect will
- appear when SkyGlobe starts. (You can force monochrome mode
- by starting with SKYGLOBE M, but why?)
-
-
- Why can't I use my Alt-arrow keys? Or F11 and F12?
-
- A better question would be, why are there so many slightly
- quirky computers out there? Try starting the program with
- SKYGLOBE K (for keyboard), which will make fuller use of
- some enhanced keyboards.
- -23-
-
- Why can't I display images properly? Or use 800x600?
-
- A better question would be, why are there so many slightly
- quirky computers out there? (Is there an echo in here?)
- SkyGlobe uses a professional graphics library to work with
- your video adapter for SVGA purposes, and it tries the VESA
- standard modes first if it detects a VESA driver. If it
- finds no such driver, SkyGlobe then tries to deal with the
- chipset directly, if it determines your system to be one of
- the 20 or so the library can currently handle.
-
- On the off-chance VESA standard won't work but direct chipset
- will, try SKYGLOBE F to Force the chipset direct method.
- To use VESA where the support for your system is not in the
- BIOS, load the TSR utility such as VESA.COM that should have
- come with your system or video card. See the appropriate
- manual for details, or contact us to see if we have recently
- added support for your system.
-
-
- Explaining the Cycles
-
- Why Different Stars Appear at Different Times
-
- The Earth makes one complete rotation every day. If there
- were no Sun we could see that the stars appear to make one
- complete revolution at the same time. The North Star,
- Polaris, is almost directly above the North Pole on the
- Earth's axis of rotation. So the stars near the North Star
- (about halfway up the northern sky in mid-northern
- latitudes) make tiny little circles every day. Farther from
- the North Star, the stars and the constellations they form
- wheel across the sky in huge arcs before they disappear
- below the Horizon.
-
-
- Why Different Stars Appear at Different Dates
-
- Imagine midnight in April. The Sun is behind the Earth,
- and you're facing away from it if you face due south. Now
- imagine midnight in October, 6 months later. You're still
- facing away from the Sun. But because the Earth has moved
- halfway around the Sun in its yearly orbit, you're looking
- in exactly the opposite direction you were in April. Dif-
- ferent stars are visible at midnight, and the ones near
- the North Star have made half a revolution. If there were
- no Sun, you could see that at noon the October sky is the
- same as the midnight sky in April.
- -24-
-
- Before Standard Time Zones, the Sun was due south at noon
- everywhere. That was what noon meant. Now that is true
- only if you happen to live near the time zone's center.
- If you live in Michigan, the Sun is due south around 12:30.
- In New York City, which is near the centerline for the same
- time zone, the Sun reaches due south a few minutes before
- noon, over a half hour earlier than in Michigan. The Sun
- reaches due south somewhat later in Chicago than in Michigan,
- but because Chicago is in the Central time zone, this occurs
- before 12:00 PM. This has to be allowed for to make the
- display correct, and is unique to each Location. Daylight
- Savings Time is handled similarly. The letter D appears
- next to the Time in the Parameter display if Daylight
- Savings Time is in effect.
-
- The sky can be viewed as a sphere with the Earth at the
- center and stars as fixed points on the sphere.
- Representing this 3D space on a 2D surface introduces
- some distortion. SkyGlobe uses a unique projection that
- calculates rapidly and accurately renders shapes as they
- appear in the sky, even near the display's edge.
-
-
- Sources
-
- A program as involved as SkyGlobe draws on many sources.
- The ultimate source in most cases is the academic
- community or NASA, but some of the best collections and
- representations of the data available are from the
- commercial realm.
-
- The SAO star database was derived from the NASA CD-ROM
- "Selected Astronomical Catalogs, Vol 1. This great disc
- is packed with all sorts of useful information, and I hope
- to find interesting ways to represent even more of it
- graphically and accessibly in future SkyGlobes and other
- programs.
-
- The Milky Way representation has its origin in the work
- of Antonie Pannekoek, and was re-adjusted by hand for
- this version to give a smooth and pleasing effect with
- the minimum possible number of lines. Obviously even the
- darkest of skies do not contain a big blue "tire track"
- running across it, but it is true that urban dwellers
- don't know what they are missing if they haven't ever
- experienced really good seeing.
-
- The constellation boundary lines were derived from the
- NASA CD. To save space only the corners were used; this
- will be improved in future versions as system resources
- continue to grow.
- -25-
-
- The star names were based on the SAO database from the
- CD, Sky Catalogue 2000.0, and Star Names: Their Lore and
- Meaning for the most part. The latter is a fascinating
- work originally published in the 19th century.
-
- Some good texts on computation are Spherical Astronomy by
- Green, Astronomical Algorithms by Meeus, and Practical
- Ephemeris Calculations by Montenbruck. I also highly
- recommend A Field Guide to the Stars and Planets by Menzel
- and Paschahoff, and Wil Tirion's Uranometria 2000.0 and
- Sky Atlas 2000.0.
-
-
- Future Plans
-
- SkyGlobe has been continually evolving since it was originally
- released in November 1989, and my future plans for the program
- and its sibling program CircumSpace are pretty ambitious. The
- next incremental version of SkyGlobe itself will have printer-
- resolution printing, hopefully including PostScript, even more
- stars available than the current 250,000+, many more DSOs with
- more information, more star names including the option of true
- Greek letters, and everything on the suggestion list that didn't
- make it this time.
-
- In addition, I am planning on a Windows version and an SVGA 256-
- color 386-specific edition of SkyGlobe. CircumSpace has even
- more potential for expansion since it is a newer product, and I
- even hope to expand to CD sometime soon, first simply for dis-
- tribution but eventually making use of its full potential.
-
- As always, I will do my best to support the people who support
- the program with their registrations by giving steep discounts
- on updates, package offers, and extra datasets. I encourage
- you to pass around the shareware version to anyone who may be
- interested, and to take however long you like to see if you
- find the program worth registering. Just be aware that you
- may missing out on something even better if you wait too long!
- -26-
-
- Our Support Policy
-
- KlassM Software is committed to offering the biggest bang
- for the byte in astronomy software. We're proud of SkyGlobe
- and want to make sure it works for you. We're also
- interested in hearing your ideas for improvement.
-
- If you have problems or suggestions regarding SkyGlobe,
- you can contact us in one of several ways:
-
- Mail: KlassM Software, Inc.
- PO Box 1067
- Ann Arbor, MI 48106
-
- Fax: (313) 426-5533
- 800-Order Line: (800) 968-4994
- CIS-Mark A Haney: 76207,3377
- CIS-KlassM Software: 75020,1431
- Wolverine BBS (v.32bis) (517) 695-9952 or 695-9964
-
-
- Ombudsman Statement
-
- As a member of the Association of Shareware Professionals,
- I am required to include the following statement, but of
- course I would prefer to communicate with you directly
- through one of the methods printed above if there is
- ever any problem with SkyGlobe.
-
- "This program is produced by a member of ASP. ASP wants to
- make sure that the shareware principle works for you. If
- you are unable to resolve a shareware-related problem with
- an ASP member by contacting the member directly, ASP may be
- able to help. The ASP Ombudsman can help you resolve a
- dispute or problem with an ASP member, but does not provide
- technical support for members' products. Please write to
- the ASP Ombudsman at 545 Grover Road, Muskegon, MI 49442
- or send a CompuServe message via CompuServe Mail to ASP
- Ombudsman 70007,3536".
-
-
-
- Discerning Our Universe
-
- A grounding philosophy of KlassM Software is "Discerning
- Our Universe." The way I see it, many of you have ideas
- about how you would develop programs yourself to portray or
- simulate the world around us, if only you had the time.
- There's bound to be something you've always wanted to see
- on your computer screens, or there's bound to be a way
- you've always wanted to explain something to the youngsters
- of any age who are important in your lives.
- -27-
-
- By listening to your ideas, by offering discounted
- registration packages to educational institutions, and
- by continuing to market our software as shareware with
- low registration fees, we try to do our part in "Discern-
- ing Our Universe" together. We appreciate your support
- as you do your part by writing in with registrations and
- suggestions, and you have our heartfelt thanks.
-
- When I first came up with the phrase "Discerning Our
- Universe", I wanted to see if anyone had used similar
- wording in the past. Naturally the first place I turned
- was to the computer, specifically to perform a CD search
- on a reference disc that came with my drive. The little
- selection below was one of my favorites from the result
- of those searches, and I hope you enjoy it too.
-
-
- A little world, in which we may discern a body
- mingled of earthly elements, and a heavenly
- spirit and the vegetable soul of plants ... the
- senses of the lower animals, and reason ... and
- the likeness of God.
-
- Pico Della Mirandola
- 15th Century Italian philosopher
- -28-
-
- Glossary
-
- altitude In SkyGlobe, the sky height of the cursor
- represents altitude.
-
- aspect ratio The ratio of the width of an image to it
- height. The aspect ratio can be adjusted, mainly for
- laptops and SVGAs, using =.
-
- Association of Shareware Professionals (ASP) An
- association formed a few years ago to help improve the
- image of shareware, and to offer support services to
- authors, vendors, and BBSes.
-
- Auto-Increment mode The SkyGlobe feature that simulates
- the passage of Time. Once activated by pressing A, it
- automatically and continuously increments Time or Date,
- either forward or backward, until it's turned off. The
- active parameters for auto-incrementing Time or Date are
- shown in the screen's upper left corner, possibly by
- pressing Shift-F2.
-
- Azimuth The arc of the Horizon measured clockwise from
- the south point to the point where a vertical circle
- through a given heavenly body intersects the Horizon. In
- SkyGlobe, the direction of the cursor represents azimuth.
-
- celestial navigation Navigation by observing apparent
- positions of heavenly bodies. Ctrl-N restricts the SkyGlobe
- display to only those stars and planets used for celestial
- navigation.
-
- celestial pole Each of two points (north and south) in
- which the extended Earth's axis cuts the celestial sphere
- (the imaginary spherical shell formed by the sky) and about
- which the stars seem to revolve.
-
- constellation boundaries Border lines, similar to state
- or county borders, that group constellations. Constellation
- boundaries were standardized by the International
- Astronomical Union so every star or object could be said
- to belong to a particular constellation.
-
- Deep Sky Object (DSO) As distinguished from stars, these
- are usually dimmer, but more interesting for telescopic
- viewing, and they include a list 110 objects compiled by
- Charles Messier, a French astronomer, to distinguish them
- from comets. Those not making his list are often referred
- to by their number in the New General Catalog.
-
- Ecliptic The annual path of the Sun. In SkyGlobe, this
- path is represented with an dark red dotted line.
- -29-
-
- eclipse When the Moon's light is obscured by the Earth
- intervening between it and the Sun (lunar eclipse) or when
- the Sun's light is obscured by the Moon intervening between
- it and the Earth (solar eclipse).
-
- Equator The great circle of the earth, equidistant from
- the North Pole and South Pole.
-
- fish eye lens A hemispherical convex lens for viewing in
- a full 180 degrees in all directions, creating a circular
- image with increasing distortion from the center to the
- periphery. The SkyGlobe sphere appears as though it were
- being viewed through a fish eye lens, with objects at the
- edges showing more distortion than objects at the center.
-
- Hash-Marks These are intermediate markings between the
- zenith cross and the horizon, and represent 15-degree
- intervals.
-
- Horizon The line or circle that forms the apparent
- boundary between Earth and sky. In SkyGlobe, the Horizon
- is shown as a green line. It represents an Elevation of
- 0 degrees.
-
- International Astronomical Union (IAU) This
- international body gets together to decide various
- standards, including constellation boundary lines and
- astronomical constants.
-
- limiting magnitude The magnitude of the dimmest star
- displayed. The number of visible stars displayed is shown
- in the screen's upper left corner, followed by the limiting
- magnitude this number represents. See also magnitude.
-
- latitude The angular distance north or south from the
- Equator of a point on the Earth's surface. See also Right
- Ascension and Declination (RA-Dec).
-
- longitude The angular distance east or west on the
- Earth's surface, measured by the angle contained between
- the meridian of a particular place and some prime meridian,
- such as that of Greenwich, England. See also Right
- Ascension and Declination (RA-Dec).
-
- magnification The ability to increase the size of an
- image and thereby view greater detail. In SkyGlobe,
- magnification possibilities range from 1.0 (the smallest
- image, a view of a full 180 degrees) to 26.0 (the largest
- image and therefore the greatest detail, generally about
- 7 degrees top to bottom). Z (for zoom) controls magnifi-
- cation. See also Zoom factor.
- -30-
-
- magnitude The brightness of a star or other celestial
- body as viewed by the unaided eye and expressed by a
- mathematical ratio of 2.512. For example, a star of the
- first magnitude is about 2-1/2 times brighter than a star
- of the second magnitude and 100 times brighter than a star
- of the fifth magnitude. Only stars of the sixth magnitude
- or brighter can be seen by the unaided eye. In SkyGlobe,
- the magnitude of selected objects is shown in the screen's
- lower left corner. See also limiting magnitude.
-
- Messier objects See Deep Sky Object (DSO).
-
- New General Catalog (NGC) A more complete catalog of
- DSOs than Charles Messier's, originally compiled by John L.
- E. Dreyer.
-
- North Star See Polaris.
-
- orthographic A projection method for displaying a curved
- surface on a flat surface. SkyGlobe uses a modified
- orthographic projection of my own devising to attempt a
- rapid and realistic portrayal of large areas of the sky.
-
- Polaris A guiding star in celestial navigation because
- of its relative constancy (due to its close proximity to
- the North Pole). Polaris is also called the North Star and
- the Pole Star.
-
- precession The wobbling motion of the Earth's axis of
- rotation, so slight that it's evident only after long spans
- of time (25,800 years).
-
- retrograde motion Apparent movement on the celestial
- sphere in the direction opposite to the natural order of
- background stars, or from east to west.
-
- Right Ascension and Declination (RA-Dec) The
- astronomical terms for terrestrial longitude and latitude
- in space. Right Ascension corresponds to longitude while
- declination corresponds to latitude. In SkyGlobe, the
- cursor's RA-Dec coordinates display in the screen's lower
- left corner. RA-Dec grid lines are shown on the sphere by
- pressing F7. See also latitude and longitude.
-
- Shareware A distribution method for software whereby
- people are encouraged to make copies for evaluation
- purposes, only paying if they plan to continue enjoying its
- use. Without this distribution channel there would almost
- certainly be no SkyGlobe as we know it today.
- -31-
-
- Sidereal day A day measured by or from the stars and
- which is equal to 23 hours and 56 minutes. To have SkyGlobe
- Auto-Increment the Date by one Sidereal day, press Shift-R.
- See also Auto-Increment mode.
-
- View Direction The orientation of the SkyGlobe display,
- represented by degrees: 0 for due north, through 180
- degrees for due south, to 350 degrees for 10 degrees west
- of north. The view SkyGlobe provides assumes you're
- standing outside looking in the same direction your feet
- are pointing. The View Direction is shown in the screen's
- upper left corner.
-
- View Elevation The orientation of the SkyGlobe display,
- represented in degrees ranging from 0 degrees (viewing the
- Horizon) to 90 degrees (viewing the Zenith). The View
- Elevation is shown in the screen's upper left corner.
-
- Zenith The point on the celestial sphere that is
- directly overhead from the observer's position. In
- SkyGlobe, the Zenith is shown as a cross mark (+) on the
- screen. It represents an Elevation of 90 degrees.
-
- Zoom factor The measurement for magnification, which in
- SkyGlobe ranges from 1.0 to 26.0. See also magnification.
- SkyGlobe 3.6 Registration Form: October 15, 1993
-
- Registration ($20) entitles you to:
-
- 1) A customized copy of SkyGlobe 3.6 with your name and Home Town(s).
- 2) A printed manual and handy reference card.
- 3) A SkyGlobe-like Windows screensaver.
- 4) A neat VGA demo program called Crystal Sphere.
- 5) Direct access to special offers and low-cost program updates.
- (For instance, our $15 CircumSpace, which simulates traveling
- in and amongst our nearest 7700 neighbor stars at warp speeds,
- is available in combination with SkyGlobe for only $25 total.)
-
- There are several ways you can register:
-
- #1. Fax this form with a credit card number to 313-426-5533.
- #2. Mail this form with a check, currency or a credit card number to:
- KlassM Software, Inc., PO BOX 1067, Ann Arbor MI 48106, USA
- #3. E-Mail this form to KlassM Software via CompuServe, 75020,1431.
- #4. Call our 800 Number, 1-800-968-4994. Credit card orders only please.
-
-
- Shipping Address: Name:.............................................
-
- Street:.............................................
-
- City, ST, ZIP:.............................................
-
- Country:.............................................
-
- Home Towns (up to 3) :.............................................
-
-
- [ ] I can read 3.5 1.44M disks. Optional extra datasets
- [ ] I require 3.5 720K disks.
- [ ] I prefer 5.25 1.2M disks. These optional datasets work
- [ ] I require 5.25 360K disks. with SkyGlobe to make it even
- better! All sets are 1.44MB;
- .GIFs require SVGA capability.
-
- SkyGlobe 3.6 alone $20.00 ........ SAO star catalog $5.00....
-
- SkyGlobe and CircumSpace $25.00 ........ Assorted .GIFs $5.00....
-
- Optional datasets total ........ Inner Planet .GIFs $5.00....
-
- Overseas shipping add $5.00 ........ Outer Planet .GIFs $5.00....
-
- Total ........ DSO .GIFs $5.00....
-
- VISA/MasterCard Information
-
- Card #______________________________ Date of Authorization _______________
-
- Signature __________________________ Amount $________ Expiration ________
-
- International customers: Payment can be in the form of a VISA/MasterCard
- authorization, a US$ dollar check from a US bank, or US or other major
- currency. See OVERSEAS.TXT for our international agents.
-