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| IL-2 Sturmovik The famous combat flight simulator. |
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#1
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The earth's ecliptic plane (ie, the plane where the sun's trajectory in relation to the earth lies, if we where to consider the earth as stationary and the sun as moving in relation to it) is near the equator. The equatorial plane doesn't coincide with the ecliptic one because of the tilt in the earth's axis, but it is close.
As such, the sun might move east to west during the day, but its apparent trajectory is always offset towards the equator, regardless of where the observer is standing. What this means is that for an observer in the north hemisphere the sun's apparent trajectory is still an east to west arc across the sky, but this arc is offset to the south. Notice, the arc is offset...the rise and sundown points are still east and west, it's the arc that connects them that exhibits the shift towards the equator. For a southern hemisphere observer it's similar but offset to the north. Now, i don't know exactly how high the sun should be, or how much to the south the arc of its apparent trajectory lies in the place we see in the screenshots, but there definitely should be a shift to the south in regards to the sun's trajectory across the sky. Pretty impressive that they model such things if you ask me, as that could hint at more nifty features for the future...night bombing missions and navigating by the stars anyone? |
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#2
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Rudolphe, how can you be so sure that both images depict the same area?
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#3
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Quote:
Use Google Earth to compare landscape, river valleys and woods and forests with those depicted on Oleg's screens. You Guys, that's pretty accurate ! Start with the high altitude view than go down to the lower / ground level view. ![]() Sun position issue. Hypothesis : The observer position alone has moved verticaly. The time is frozen. On the high level view, check the relation between the Isle of Wight and the west coast of French Contentin and you'll find the sun has a southerly position. On this ground level screenshot, look at the sun peeping south above the horizon. Except if the observer lives near Tromsø, ... Last edited by Rodolphe; 07-14-2010 at 02:08 PM. |
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#4
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Thanks for the explanation Rudolphe, that makes sense!
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