Ultimate space simulation software

 
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Galaxy Architect
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18 Feb 2021 16:24

Doc are there any long term risks with the gpu running over 80C?
Shorter lifespan, but this applies to any piece of hardware.
whats the threshold for lifespan?  lifespan doesn't shorten if the temps remain below 80 or does it have to be under 70 or something else, Doc?
I think for cpu it's under 70?
 
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HarbingerDawn
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19 Feb 2021 00:42

Doc are there any long term risks with the gpu running over 80C?
Shorter lifespan, but this applies to any piece of hardware.
whats the threshold for lifespan?  lifespan doesn't shorten if the temps remain below 80 or does it have to be under 70 or something else, Doc?
I think for cpu it's under 70?
This is off topic for this thread. Talk about it in another thread or in PMs.
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evildrganymede
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22 Feb 2021 21:05

Image

These look like extremely thick rings - aren't they supposed to be more like 10m in vertical height? (if that's a typical Federation ship then the rings should be more like the thickness of the edge of the saucer section?) Maybe that's why it's over-taxing your system ;)
 
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DoctorOfSpace
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23 Feb 2021 01:08

These look like extremely thick rings - aren't they supposed to be more like 10m in vertical height? (if that's a typical Federation ship then the rings should be more like the thickness of the edge of the saucer section?) Maybe that's why it's over-taxing your system

Read Vladimir's response on particle size, it is being worked on still
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Khorrah
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23 Feb 2021 04:28

Ok I think my pc wouldn't support the next update since my integrated graphics card are of 128 mb LOL
Technically that doesn't meet the minimum requirements of any version of SE ever released, even ones from 10 years ago.
The thing is that I don't know why I can run it, I guess because my processor and ram (Pentium gold 5400 3.7 ghz and 8gb ddr4 and 2400 mhz) the solar system runs slightly slow, but when I go to a procedural planet, it moves very slow, I think that is killing my integrated GPU, I need to buy a new graphic card
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Khorrah
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23 Feb 2021 04:33

Being worked on still, more will be posted about it when it's ready.
My top wish for SpaceEngine is for the devs to be more transparent about WIP features.
Today's your lucky day then, because I've got a massive dose of transparency coming your way!

Ready?
► Show Spoiler
I loved this one LOL 
Hello, I LOVE lasagna and Space Engine. ♥

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Khorrah
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23 Feb 2021 04:38

I'm curious of something, we'll be able to see volcanic gases and 3d hurricanes or tornadoes? (Hurricanes that touches the floor) rains, sandstorms, thunders? 

I think this is a obvious question tbh
Hello, I LOVE lasagna and Space Engine. ♥

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HarbingerDawn
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23 Feb 2021 14:12

I'm curious of something, we'll be able to see volcanic gases and 3d hurricanes or tornadoes? (Hurricanes that touches the floor) rains, sandstorms, thunders? 

I think this is a obvious question tbh
Read the second paragraph here: http://forum.spaceengine.org/viewtopic.php?f=6&t=72

Also, please do not make 3 posts in a row. Edit your previous post if you want to add something.
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longname
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23 Feb 2021 17:16

Image

These look like extremely thick rings - aren't they supposed to be more like 10m in vertical height? (if that's a typical Federation ship then the rings should be more like the thickness of the edge of the saucer section?) Maybe that's why it's over-taxing your system ;)
I've seen a few sources state that the thickness fluctuates between a few dozen meters and a kilometre.
[dah<500,26>dah<180,14>dah<180,21>dah<500,19>dah<180,26>dah<500,21>]
 
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evildrganymede
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23 Feb 2021 17:49

https://www.space.com/48-saturn-the-sol ... earer.html
that says they're usually about 10m thick, in some places where they're disrupted they get thicker.

I think most current estimates tend towards the 10-20m thick range rather than the 100m-km range anyway. And certainly for the purpose of SE (and practical processing speed) I doubt anyone would complain if they were generally set to the order of 10m thick. 
 
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Simon142
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26 Feb 2021 02:18

My laptop is already deepfrying itself when scrolling 3D rings screenshots xD
 
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26 Feb 2021 17:09

Bunch of a new screenshots. Rock size and ring thickness varies across planets, but is at order of 10 meters in diameter and 100 meters thick. Smaller rocks still have some precision issues. Performance is in 40-60 fps at 1440p and rings rendering resolution 70% on RTX 2080 (and no, RTX is OFF, SE doesn't support it). Performance is dropped because of smaller rock size, which equals to larger ring scale, which implies switch to (emulated) double-precision floating point numbers.

3D dust to rocks transition
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Uranus
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Neptune
scr00496.jpg
Haumea
scr00497.jpg
Chariklo, a giant ringed asteroid (centaur)
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0.990 starting planet :)
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scr00490.jpg
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Geonosis :)
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scr00492.jpg
 
vlad01
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26 Feb 2021 18:10

How will performance of the rings compare between the latest AMD cards and nvidia ones given the AMD ones have much higher double precision, 1:16 verse 1:64 of the nvidia ones?   Example. 6800XT 1.3 TFLOPs FP64 vs 0.46 TFLOPs FP64 of the 3080.  
 
Roy
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26 Feb 2021 22:18

Wanna see J1407b
 
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HarbingerDawn
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27 Feb 2021 01:09

How will performance of the rings compare between the latest AMD cards and nvidia ones given the AMD ones have much higher double precision, 1:16 verse 1:64 of the nvidia ones?   Example. 6800XT 1.3 TFLOPs FP64 vs 0.46 TFLOPs FP64 of the 3080.  
As he said in the post, the double precision numbers are emulated, so it makes no difference.
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