Book Image

Augmented Reality for Developers

By : Jonathan Linowes, Krystian Babilinski
Book Image

Augmented Reality for Developers

By: Jonathan Linowes, Krystian Babilinski

Overview of this book

Augmented Reality brings with it a set of challenges that are unseen and unheard of for traditional web and mobile developers. This book is your gateway to Augmented Reality development—not a theoretical showpiece for your bookshelf, but a handbook you will keep by your desk while coding and architecting your first AR app and for years to come. The book opens with an introduction to Augmented Reality, including markets, technologies, and development tools. You will begin by setting up your development machine for Android, iOS, and Windows development, learning the basics of using Unity and the Vuforia AR platform as well as the open source ARToolKit and Microsoft Mixed Reality Toolkit. You will also receive an introduction to Apple's ARKit and Google's ARCore! You will then focus on building AR applications, exploring a variety of recognition targeting methods. You will go through multiple complete projects illustrating key market sectors including business marketing, education, industrial training, and gaming. By the end of the book, you will have gained the necessary knowledge to make quality content appropriate for a range of AR devices, platforms, and intended uses.
Table of Contents (16 chapters)
Title Page
Credits
About the Authors
About the Reviewer
www.PacktPub.com
Customer Feedback
Preface

Adding the other planets


The following table shows the data of each of the planets, in values relative to the earth (source: https://nssdc.gsfc.nasa.gov/planetary/factsheet/planet_table_ratio.html). For example, you can see that Mercury is 0.38 smaller than Earth, and Jupiter is 11.21 times bigger than Earth. Mercury takes 58.8 days to make one rotation that Earth does in 24 hours, yet makes its way around the sun in just 87.7 earth days.

 

Relative diameter

Relative distance from Sun

Rotation(Earth days)

Orbit(Earth days)

Mercury

0.38

0.39

58.8

87.7

Venus

0.95

0.74

-244

226.5

Earth

1

1

1

365.25

Moon

0.27

0

27.4

Mars

0.53

1.55

1.0

686.67

Jupiter

11.21

5.29

0.42

4,346

Saturn

9.45

9.7

0.45

10,592

Uranus

4.01

19.5

-0.72

32,032

Neptune

3.88

30.6

0.67

59,791

Pluto

0.19

40.2

6.41

90,545

 

We will accurately scale the planets relative to the earth's size.

You can try to adjust their positions to be in line with the real distance from the sun. But as mentioned at the top of this chapter (as we saw with the earth and the moon), these distances are literally...