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January 14, 2010
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:iconaporev:
Deep in a far away Nebula lies a mysterious object discovered by the Apo team of "Horseshoe3D" and "Loonie_3D" looking through the FX instrument in the 3D hack. Scientists have yet to understand the empty space surrounding the object. Is it a force field? What forces lie behind the wave like structures observed nearby?
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~spiritofcat Jan 21, 2010  Hobbyist Digital Artist
Wow, it's beautiful!
I really like that halo of emptiness around the egg, and the translucency of the egg itself.

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Well that's my 4c Australian.:D
~australia #dapride ~datrans ~pussypatrol *daac
:heart:~Timmerryn:heart:
To be old and wise you must first be young and stupid.;)
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:iconaporev:
Hi,

Thanks for the comment. This one surprised me as I had no expectation of this result. It came about after I had 5 Transforms plus the FX. I experimentally added "Loonie 3D" to the FX and the egg happened. It's fun, but I haven't figured out what's going on in the code that generates the space - though I have some ideas about it.

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=Apophysis
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:iconaegiandyad:
The Dragon's Egg is an oblate, fast spinning 'collapsar', or neutron star, with a pronounced precessionary wobble, the cause of which is still a puzzle for relativistic physicists across the galaxy. This, combined with its rapid passage through the nebula, is the cause of the structures seen here in time-lapsed combined nuetrino emission scans collected over the course of a standard year. There are intense electromagnetic fields associated with a thin 'sea' of uncollapsed electrons covering the surface to a depth of several microns. None of the spectacular electrical activity, intense plasma jets, etc. are visible in a neutral particle scan, naturally.
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:iconaporev:
Ah, good story there... I wonder what the next scans will tell? Some of them are quite interesting relative to the appearance of this image.

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=Apophysis
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