Kerbal Space Program

Kerbal Space Program

Timelapse of geostationary Minmus Station
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8 commenti
Astronaut 19 gen 2018, ore 12:49 
Ok. Thanks.
hensing1  [autore] 19 gen 2018, ore 12:48 
I shot it with Shadowplay and edited it with a gif website, ezgif.com I think.
Astronaut 18 gen 2018, ore 14:02 
How do you get short clips like these?
hensing1  [autore] 26 mar 2017, ore 13:12 
Well, kinda. It's the same effect when you are in map view and a planet is moved in front of the sun. The sun doesn't disappear directly, but dimms out over the course of maybe 2 seconds. But in this timelapse, the sun appears to move so quickly behind Minmus that it hasn't got time to completely vanish. It does get slightly dimmer though if you look carefully.
spacebrick3 26 mar 2017, ore 10:48 
How come the Sun goes in front of Minmus? Is it just a time warp bug?
Greg the Peg-Leg Preg Dreg 19 mar 2017, ore 15:53 
yeah there are far too many varying terms for space things that are basically the same ie apogee apohelion, perigee perihelion all describe the same parts of an orbit only diff is the body you are orbiting, damn these science people
hensing1  [autore] 19 mar 2017, ore 15:48 
oh well.
Greg the Peg-Leg Preg Dreg 19 mar 2017, ore 15:32 
geo stationary implies an orbit around earth, so this would be just stationary, or mimostationary??? mimus is a terristrial body so maybe terostationary? no that sounds like a stagnant root.