- -arc_file
- Specify an arc file to be plotted against the background stars.
Each line in the file must have the following syntax:
dec1 ra1 dec2 ra2
where declination is in degrees and right ascension is in hours.
This option has no effect if -projection is specified.
- -arc_spacing spacing
- When drawing an arc, draw line segments that are spacing
degrees apart. The default is 0.1 degrees. Line segments shorter
than spacing will not be drawn.
- -background background_file
- Use background_file as the background image, with the planet to
be superimposed upon it. This option is only meaningful with the
-projection option. A color may also be supplied (e.g. -background
"navy blue" or -background 0xff00ff).
- -base_magnitude magnitude
- A star of the specified magnitude will have a pixel brightness
of 1. The default value is 10. Stars will be drawn more brightly if
this number is larger.
- -body body
- Render an image of the specified planet or satellite. Valid
values for body are sun, mercury, venus, earth, moon, mars, phobos,
deimos, jupiter, io, europa, ganymede, callisto, saturn, mimas,
enceladus, tethys, dione, rhea, titan, hyperion, iapetus, phoebe,
uranus, miranda, ariel, umbriel, titania, oberon, neptune, triton,
nereid, pluto, charon, random, and major.
The field of view can also be centered on a satellite location
using "naif" or "norad", along with the satellite id. For example,
"-body naif-82" will center the field of view on NAIF ID -82, which
is the Cassini orbiter. Xplanet must be compiled with SPICE support
and the required kernels must be present. See the README in the
spice subdirectory for more details. Using "-body norad20580" will
center the field of view on NORAD ID 20580, which is the Hubble
Space Telescope. The appropriate TLE files must be present in this
case. See the README in the satellites subdirectory for more
information.
Using "path" will center the field of view on the direction of
motion of the origin. This direction is relative to the direction
of motion of the body specified by -path_relative_to.
Earth is the default body. This option is the same as -target.
- -center +x+y
- Place the center of the rendered body at pixel coordinates (x,
y). The upper left corner of the screen is at (0,0). Either x or y
may be negative. The default value is the center of the screen.
- -color color
- Set the color for the label. The default is "red". Any color in
the rgb.txt file may be used. Colors may also be specified by RGB
hex values; for example -color 0xff and -color blue mean the same
thing, as do -color 0xff0000 and -color red.
- -config config_file
- Use the configuration file config_file. The format of
config_file is described in README.config. See the description of
-searchdir to see where xplanet looks in order to find the
configuration file.
- -date YYYYMMDD.HHMMSS
- Use the date specified instead of the current local time. The
date is assumed to be GMT.
- -date_format string
- Specify the format for the date/time label. This format string
is passed to strftime(3).
The default is "%c %Z", which shows the date, time, and time zone
in the locale's appropriate date and time representation.
- -dynamic_origin file
- Specify an observer location. The location is relative to the
body specified with -origin (by default, this is the Sun). The last
line of the file must be of the form
YYYYMMDD.HHMMSS range lat lon localtime
For example,
19951207.120000 10.328 -3.018 97.709 9.595
The specified time is ignored and the current time is used. The
range is in planetary radii, and lat and lon are in degrees.
Localtime (in hours) is optional, but if present, it will be used
in place of the longitude. Only the last line of the file is used.
This file may be updated between renderings using a script executed
with the -prev_command or -post_command options.
- -ephemeris_file filename
- Specify a JPL digital ephemeris file (DE200, DE405, or DE406)
to use for computing planetary positions. Xplanet uses Bill Gray's
code (http://www.projectpluto.com/jpl_eph.htm),
which reads both big and little endian binary files. The ephemeris
files found at ftp://ssd.jpl.nasa.gov/pub/eph/export/unix
are big endian files, but you do not need to do any additional
byte-swapping to use them. See the description of -searchdir to see
where xplanet looks in order to find the star map.
- -font fontname
- Set the font for the label. Only TrueType fonts are supported.
If the -pango option is used, fontname is taken to be the font
family name (e.g. "Arial").
- -fontsize size
- Specify the point size. The default is 12.
- -fork
- Detach from the controlling terminal. This is useful on MS
Windows to run xplanet from a batch file without having to keep a
DOS window open. Be careful when using this option; it's easy to
have multiple processes running at the same time without knowing it
- check the Task Manager. On unix systems this is pretty much the
same as running xplanet in the background.
- -fov
- Specify the field of view, in degrees. This option and the
-radius option are mutually exclusive. This option has no effect if
the -projection option is used.
- -geometry string
- Specify the image geometry using the standard X window geometry
syntax,
[<width>{xX}<height>][{+-}<xoffset>{+-}<yoffset>]
(e.g. 256x256-10+10 puts a window 256x256 pixels in size 10 pixels
away from the right side and 10 pixels below the top of the root
window). The root window outside of the image will be black. This
option may be used with -window or -output.
- -glare radius
- Draw a glare around the sun with with a radius of the specified
value larger than the sun. The default value is 28.
- -gmtlabel
- Same as the -label option, but show GMT instead of local time.
- -grs_longitude lon
- The longitude of Jupiter's Great Red Spot (GRS). A typical
value is 94 degrees. If this option is specified, longitudes on
Jupiter will be calculated in System II coordinates. By default,
longitudes are calculated in System III coordinates. When using
this option, use an image map for Jupiter where the center of the
GRS is at the pixel 0 column, or the left side of the image.
- -hibernate seconds
- After the screen has been idle for the specified number of
seconds, xplanet will sleep. This option requires xplanet to have
been compiled with the X Screensaver extension.
- -idlewait seconds
- Don't run Xplanet unless the screen has been idle for the
specified number of seconds. This option requires xplanet to have
been compiled with the X Screensaver extension.
- -interpolate_origin_file
- This option is only useful in conjunction with -origin_file. It
computes the observer position at the current time by interpolating
between values specified in the origin file. This is useful if you
have spacecraft positions tabulated in an origin file, but want a
real time view.
- -jdate Julian date
- Use the specified Julian date instead of the current local
time.
- -label
- Display a label in the upper right corner.
- -labelpos
- Specify the location of the label using the standard X window
geometry syntax. The default position is "-15+15", or 15 pixels to
the left and below the top right corner of the display. This option
implies -label.
- -label_string
- Specify the text of the first line of the label. By default, it
says something like "Looking at Earth". Any instances of %t will be
replaced by the target name, and any instances of %o will be
replaced by the origin name.
- -latitude latitude
- Render the target body as seen from above the specified
latitude (in degrees). The default value is 0.
- -light_time
- Account for the time it takes for light to travel from the
target body to the observer. The default is to ignore the effects
of light time.
- -log_magstep step
- Increase the brightness of a star by 10^step for each integer
decrease in magnitude. The default value is 0.4. This means that a
star of magnitude 2 is 10^0.4 (about 2.5) times brighter than a
star of magnitude 3. A larger number makes stars brighter.
- -longitude longitude
- Place the observer above the specified longitude (in degrees).
Longitude is positive going east, negative going west (for the
earth and moon), so for example Los Angeles is at -118 or 242. The
default value is 0.
- -make_cloud_maps
- If there is an entry in the config file for cloud_map, xplanet
will output a day and night image with clouds overlaid and then
exit. The images will be created in the directory specified by
-tmpdir, or in the current directory if -tmpdir is not used. The
names of the output images default to day_clouds.jpg and
night_clouds.jpg, but may be changed by the -output option. If
"-output filename.extension" is specified, the output images will
be named "day_filename.extension" and "night_filename.extension".
The dimensions of the output images are the same as the day image.
- -marker_file
- Specify a file containing user defined marker data to display
against the background stars. The format of each line is generally
declination, right ascension, string, as in the example below:
-16.7161 6.7525 "Sirius"
For additional options which may be specified, see the marker_file
entry in README.config. This option has no effect if -projection is
specified. This option is not meant for city markers; for that use
the marker_file option in the configuration file.
- -markerbounds filename
- Write coordinates of the bounding box for each marker to
filename. This might be useful if you're using xplanet to make
imagemaps for web pages. Each line looks like:
204,312 277,324 Los Angeles
where the coordinates are for the upper left and lower right
corners of the box. This file gets rewritten every time xplanet
renders its image.
- -north north_type
- This option rotates the image so that the top points to
north_type. Valid values for north_type are:
body: body's north pole
galactic: galactic north pole
orbit: body's orbital north pole (perpendicular to the orbit plane)
path: origin's velocity vector (also see -path_relative_to option)
The default value is "body".
- -num_times num_times
- Run num_times before exiting. The default is to run
indefinitely.
- -origin body
- Place the observer at the center of the specified body. Valid
values are the same as for -target. In addition, "above", "below",
or "system" may be specified. Using "above" or "below" centers the
view on the body's primary and the field of view is large enough to
show the body's orbit. Using "system" places the observer at the
center of a random body in the same system as the target body. Two
bodies are in the same system if one of the following is true:
1) target and origin have same primary
2) target is origin's primary
3) origin is target's primary
If the body name is preceded by a dash, the observer is placed on
the opposite side of the target from the specified body at a
distance equal to the distance between the target and body. For
example, -target earth -origin sun places the observer at the
center of the sun. If -target earth -origin -sun is used, the
observer is placed on a line connecting the centers of the earth
and sun at a distance of 1 AU farther from the sun than the earth.
- -origin_file origin_file
- Specify a list of observer positions in origin_file. The
positions are relative to the body specified with -origin (by
default, this is the Sun). Each line should be of the form
YYYYMMDD.HHMMSS range lat lon localtime
For example,
19951207.120000 10.328 -3.018 97.709 9.595
Range is in planetary radii, and lat and lon are in degrees. The
date is the only required value. If the localtime (in hours) is
supplied, it will be used in place of the longitude. For each line
in the origin file, the observer is placed at the specified
position, relative to the body specified with -origin. This option
is useful for showing spacecraft flybys or orbiting around a
planet. Any line with a # in the first column is ignored.
- -output filename
- Output to a file instead of rendering to a window. The file
format is taken from the extension. Currently .gif, .jpg, .ppm,
.png, and .tiff images can be created, if xplanet has been compiled
with the appropriate libraries. The image size defaults to 512 by
512 pixels but this may be changed by the -geometry flag. If used
with the -num_times option, each output file will be numbered
sequentially.
- -output_start_index index
- Start numbering output files at index. The default is 0.
- -pango
- Use the Pango (http://www.pango.org) library for
rendering internationalized text. Pango uses Unicode for all of its
encoding, and will eventually support output in all the worlds
major languages. If xplanet has not been compiled with this library
this option will be ignored. There appear to be memory leaks in the
pango library, so I don't recommend letting xplanet run
indefinitely with this option.
- -path_relative_to body
- Only used with -north path or -target path. The origin's
velocity vector is calculated relative to the specified body. By
default, this is the Sun.
- -post_command command
- -prev_command command
- Run command either before or after each time xplanet renders an
image. On MS Windows, you may need to use unix-style paths. For
example:
xplanet.exe -prev_command ./prev.bat
- -print_ephemeris
- Print the heliocentric rectangular equatorial coordinates
(J2000) for each body xplanet knows about, and then exit.
- -projection projection_type
- The projection type may be one of ancient, azimuthal, bonne,
gnomonic, hemisphere, lambert, mercator, mollweide, orthographic,
peters, polyconic, rectangular, or tsc. The default is no
projection. Multiple bodies will not be shown if this option is
specified, although shadows will still be drawn.
- -proj_param value
- Pass additional parameters for some projections. The only
projections that use this option at present are the Bonne,
Gnomonic, and Mercator projections. The Bonne projection is
conformal at the specified latitude. Higher values lead to a
thinner heart shape. The default is 50 degrees. The Gnomonic and
Mercator projections use the specified latitude as the boundaries
of the projection. The defaults are 45 and 80 degrees,
respectively. This option may be used more than once for future
projections that require additional parameters. Only the first
value is used at present.
- -quality quality
- This option is only used when creating JPEG images. The quality
can range from 0 to 100. The default value is 80.
- -radius radius
- Specify the radius of the globe as a percent of the screen
height. The default value is 45% of the screen height. When drawing
Saturn, the radius value applies to the radius of the outer ring.
- -random
- Place the observer above a random latitude and longitude.
- -range range
- Render the globe as seen from a distance of range from the
planet's center, in units of the planetary radius. The default
value is 1000. Note that if you use very close ranges the field of
view of the screen can be greater than 180 degrees! If you want an
"up close" image use the -radius option.
- -rotate angle
- Rotate the globe by angle degrees counterclockwise so that
north (as defined by the -north argument) isn't at the top. The
default value is 0. My friends in the Southern Hemisphere can use
-rotate 180 to make the earth look like it should! For
non-orthographic projections, the globe is rotated and then
projected, if that helps you visualize what to expect.
- -save_desktop_file
- On Microsoft Windows and Mac OS X, xplanet creates an
intermediate image file which is used to set the desktop. This file
will be created in the -tmpdir directory. By default, this image is
removed after the desktop has been set. Specifying this option will
leave the file in place.
- -searchdir directory
- Any files used by xplanet should be placed in one of the
following directories depending on its type: "arcs", "config",
"ephemeris", "fonts", "images", "markers", "origin", "satellites",
or "stars". By default, xplanet will look for a file in the
following order:
The current directory
searchdir
subdirectories of searchdir
subdirectories of xplanet (if it exists in the current directory)
subdirectories of ${HOME}/.xplanet on X11
subdirectories of ${HOME}/Library/Xplanet on Mac OS X
subdirectories of DATADIR/xplanet
DATADIR is set at compile time and defaults to /usr/local/share.
- -spice_ephemeris index
- Use SPICE kernels to compute the position of the named body.
The index is the naif ID code (e.g. 599 for Jupiter). The
-spice_file option must be used to supply the names of the kernel
files. This option may be used more than once for different bodies.
- -spice_file spice_file
- Specify a file containing a list of objects to display. A file
containing a list of SPICE kernels to read named spice_file.krn
must exist along with spice_file. See the README in the "spice"
subdirectory for more information.
- -starfreq frequency
- Fraction of background pixels that will be colored white. The
default value is 0.001. This option is only meaningful with the
azimuthal, mollweide, orthographic, and peters projections.
- -starmap starmap
- Use starmap to draw the background stars. This file should be a
text file where each line has the following format:
Declination, Right Ascension, Magnitude
where Declination is in decimal degrees and Right Ascension is in
decimal hours. For example, the entry for Sirius is
-16.7161 6.7525 -1.46
See the description of -searchdir to see where xplanet looks in
order to find the star map.
- -target target
- Same as -body.
- -tt
- Use terrestrial time instead of universal time. The two differ
slightly due to the non-uniform rotation of the earth. The default
is to use universal time.
- -timewarp
- As in xearth, scale the apparent rate at which time progresses
by factor. The default is 1.
- -tmpdir tmpdir
- Specify a directory that xplanet will use to place images
created using -make_cloud_maps. On Microsoft Windows, xplanet will
write a bitmap file called xplanet.bmp to the specified directory.
The default is the result of the GetWindowsDirectory call
(C:WINDOWS on Win95). On Mac OS X, xplanet will create an
intermediate PNG file in order to set the background. The default
value is /tmp. On Windows and Mac OS X, the intermediate file will
be removed unless the -save_desktop_file option is specified.
- -transparency
- Update the background pixmap for transparent Eterms and aterms.
This option only works under X11.
- -transpng filename
- Same as the -output option, except set the background to be
transparent when writing a PNG file.
- -utclabel
- Same as -gmtlabel.
- -verbosity level
-
level output
< 0 only fatal error messages
0 non-fatal warning messages
1 basic information
2 basic diagnostics
3 more detailed diagnostics
4 very detailed diagnostics
The default value is 0.
- -version
- Display current version information, along with a list of
compile-time options that xplanet supports.
- -vroot
- Render the image to the virtual root window. Some window
managers use one big window that sits over the real root window as
their background window. Xscreensaver uses a virtual root window to
cover the screen as well.
- -wait wait
- Update every wait seconds.
- -window
- Render the image to its own X window. The size defaults to 512
by 512 pixels but this may be set by the -geometry flag.
- -window_title title
- -window_title title
- Set the window's title to title. This option implies -window.
- Set the window's title to title. This option implies -window.
- -xscreensaver
- Same as -vroot.