My new Stellar Mapping page is finally online! You can check it out at:
http://evildrganymede.net/rpgs/stellar-mapping/
This is a complete rewrite of my previous "Realistic Astrography" page, and now includes Equatorial to Galactic co-ordinate conversion files, the complete RECONS (2012) for stars within 23 lightyears of Sol, as well as all the data from the DENSE, Hipparcos, Gliese 3, and Yale catalogues for stars out to 300ly from Sol!
I've also included all the data in Astrosynthesis 3.0 format, which can be imported as CSV and then used in the program! You'll be wanting to look at this if you want the most accurate and complete near star data that is currently available!
RECONS near star data, looking to coreward:
Comments
In this blog article, I describe how to use the VizieR database to make your own stellar database with Galactic XYZ co-ordinates (and how to import it into Astrosynthesis too)! The example provided is a corridor between Sol and the Pleiades (2300AD RPG fans will recognise this as the Bayern corridor!), going out to 500ly from Sol and including the Pleiades themselves. I've also updated the Stellar Mapping page and included the Pleiades Corridor there as a download!
You'll want to re-download the RECONS files so you can include that star in the data too!
I've added an "Updates" section to the Stellar Mapping page so keep people informed if I find any more missing stars (and so I don't keep spamming boards with these updates!), so check back on the page every now and then for any more updates!
BTW...have you considering taking the HabCat file and turning them into galactic and AS3 coordinates?
I suppose I could make a separate HabCat file at some point though...
You stop at around 300 lightyears with around 20,000 stars.
The HabCat file has around 17,000 stars, with 75% of them within 450 lightyears of Earth.
Therefore, a large number of them would be outside what your numbers do.
I just think it would be really cool to have them in the program as they would probably be useful for a LOT of people who want to do use systems with a high probability of having habitable worlds.
CTIOPI would add 77 stars to the list within 50 ly of Sol (and beyond the 22.8 ly RECONS sphere), and 184 stars to the total dataset.
And each of these you are making certain that the star types are right, or just the locations?
Are the systems time-corrected, or just e2000 positions?
In other words, if a star is 100 ly away, are its coordinates what they are today or 100 years ago?
Nope. The locations are based on the J2000 coordinates of the stars as we see them today. It doesn't account for proper motion at all.
If you've downloaded the datasets previously, you'll need to download the updated versions!
See http://evildrganymede.net/2012/03/12/stellar-mapping-extended-hipparcos-dataset-added/ for details!
I've also made some major updates to the other datasets on the Stellar Mapping page, so if you're using them then you'll want to download the new versions!
See http://evildrganymede.net/2012/03/25/stellar-mapping-brown-dwarf/ for more details!