StarChart

Category: Science & Math
Language:
Shared by: MR
On: 2023-01-07 16:59:21
Updated by: InkBlot
On: 2023-08-28 15:53:46
Rating: 0.00 Clarus out of 10 (0 vote)
Rate it: 12345678910


(There's no video for StarChart yet. Please contribute to MR and add a video now!)

  •  
  •  
  •  
  •  

What is StarChart ?

StarChart is a standalone program that will plot a portion of the night sky on the Macintosh screen.  Several new features have been added to this version of StarChart. Here is how to use the program:

  1. StarChart will plot a section of the sky based upon information given to it by the user.  Under the StarChart menu, you will see four menu options.  The first is Plot New Chart....  After choosing this command, you will see a dialog box where you can enter three numbers, View Angle, Right Ascension and Declination.  If you don't know what these terms mean, the picture may help you.  Note that the View Angle must be between 1 and 360, Right Ascension must be between 0 and 24, and Declination must be between -90 and 90.  Click the mouse on Plot to begin plotting that portion of the sky.
  2. The next menu choice under the StarChart menu will bring up a list of the 88 constellations.  StarChart will plot the section of the sky that contains the constellation that you choose.
  3. The next menu choice will list Messier objects.  StarChart will plot the section of the sky that contains that Messier object.  The object will be plotted at or near the center of the screen.
  4. The next menu choice will list popular star names for 88 of the brightest stars in the sky.  As above, after choosing one of these, StarChart will plot that portion of the night sky.  The star chosen will be plotted at or near the center of the screen.  
  5. StarChart will take from a few seconds to several minutes to plot the sky.  The plotting time depends on the coordinates given. Generally, the farther away from 0 the declination gets, the longer the plotting time.  Also, larger view angles will increase the plotting time.  Just click the mouse if you wish to cancel the plot at any time.
  6. After StarChart has finished plotting, you may retrieve data about any object on the screen by pointing to it with the mouse and clicking. A menu will appear in the menu bar that contains information on that object.  If the star does not have a popular name, the title of the menu will be its abbreviated Greek designation.  For example, the star "Beta Scorpio" would be abbreviated "BETSCO".  The Greek letter usually represents the rank in brightness in that constellation.  For example, "Beta Scorpio" would probably be the second brightest star in the constellation Scorpio (but this is not always true).  If the star does have a popular name, that name will be the title of the menu, and its Greek designation will be the first entry under the menu bar.  Below this information is the Right Ascension, Declination, Magnitude and Color Index of the star.  The magnitude will range any where from -.1 to 9.9, the larger the number, the less bright the object.  (A few Messier objects had magnitudes above 9.9.  These were entered in the database as "9.9".)  The Color Index is an indicator of the color of the star.  It ranges from -.25 to +2.5.  A lower number means the star is bluer; a higher number means the star is redder.  Note that Messier objects do not have a Color Index.
  7. Under the "Draw" menu is the option "Draw Grid". Choosing this option will draw a labeled grid across the screen, with lines representing hours of Right Ascension and 10 degrees incriments in declination. This facilitates star-hopping with a telescope.
  8. By holding down the command key, you may draw straight lines across the screen.  This is useful for outlining constellations or other objects.  The lines that you draw may be erased with the "Erase Lines" option in the "Draw" menu.  
  9. The third option under the "Draw" menu allows you to invert the screen so that the stars appear black on a white screen.  This is useful in case you want to print the contents of the screen using the Command-Shift-4 key combination.
  10. The "Brightness" menu allows you to selectively plot certain magnitudes of stars. All magnitudes of stars will be plotted if "Plot All Stars" is chosen. If you wish to see only stars between magnitudes 2.0 and 2.9, choose that option. Note that you can choose any combination of magnitudes; for example you can choose to see only stars brighter than 1.0 and dimmer than 5.0. Choosing "Plot All Stars" cancels all options previously selected. Note that limiting the stars that StarChart has to plot speeds up the plotting greatly.

Wentworth, Tim. (January 1987). Star Chart Info. Electronic Document.


Download StarChart for Mac

(50.03 KiB / 51.23 KB)
/ compressed w/ Stuffit
5 / 2023-01-07 / bfbbff7d5b6695d6b5709e6dadb7852ad987d65f / /


Architecture


Motorola 68K




Compatibility notes


Emulating this? It could probably run under: Mini vMac





To date, Macintosh Repository served 3506595 old Mac files, totaling more than 710964.2GB!
Downloads last 24h = 1390 : 237910.9MB
Last 5000 friend visitors from all around the world come from:
13096 (Mac OS 7.5.3)
 
Let's chat about old Macs!