this post was submitted on 03 Jul 2023
6 points (100.0% liked)

Silo TV & Book Series

290 readers
1 users here now

This is is a sister community of r/SiloSeries for news and discussion of the post-apocalyptic tv series Silo, on Apple TV+ as well as the WOOL series of books written by Hugh Howey that the show is based on.

Sister community over on r/SiloSeries


Season 1 Episode Discussion Links


Rules:

Spoilers:

Civility:

Piracy:

Off-topic:

Bootstrapping:


Other communities with related topics:

[email protected]

[email protected]

founded 1 year ago
MODERATORS
 

cross-posted from: https://lemmit.online/post/79907

This is an automated archive made by the Lemmit Bot.

The original was posted on /r/siloseries by /u/Andromeda321 on 2023-07-03 15:47:31+00:00.


Just putting this up because I’ve seen many posts speculating about the location of the Silo, but not putting it in the context of what we DO know, which is it’s in the northern hemisphere because the “W” is the constellation Cassiopeia. Which, for those unfamiliar, is a VERY northern constellation- more north than the Big Dipper, one of the first ones you hit going from the Little Dipper/Ursa Minor. Which leads to the following details:

  • The city is to the north of the Silo(s) (bc it’s just over the ridge where we see Cassiopeia), so per the panoramas at the end (with the mountains in the opposite direction of the city) those mountains are to the south. I mention this for those detailing how the snapshot of the city must be to the east of Atlanta- celestially this just doesn’t hold up.
  • We don’t know how high the rim is obscuring the city, but with the height of Cassiopeia I’m gonna bet if anything Atlanta is a bit too south for it to be visible that high and clearly. Even from say Florida today you need a decent horizon and good viewing to easily spot it, so definitely not south of there; similarly at European/ Canadian latitudes Cassiopeia starts getting pretty direct overhead. So I think mid-latitude lower 48 makes sense.
  • also worth noting, since the camera is fairly narrow angle that they clean, there’s likely never a view of the sun and the moon in the Silo, nor of the planets. In these latitudes those are always in the southern sky from you, with the furthest they go “north” is East and West. Maybe a brief one, but my evidence here is you know what’s way more obvious to a stargazer than Cassiopeia? The planet Venus, or Jupiter, which are honking bright in comparison and they move, on the same ecliptic line as the sun (moon is a tiny bit off but not much). More interesting and easier to track, but they aren’t mentioned! So makes me think the moon is never seen either, for starters.
  • That said there is a sun in the simulation. Unclear if that’s just bc they can view 360 degrees, or there’s enough fake things in the simulation that who cares about the sun in the wrong part of the sky. :)

Finally this all goes with the caveat that often constellations etc in movies and tv are just plain wrong- James Cameron famously obsessed over details of accuracy in Titanic for example but the sky was 100% wrong with the North Atlantic in spring. But I’m hoping if they included constellations as a plot point we can assume someone checked what would be accurate.

top 2 comments
sorted by: hot top controversial new old
[–] marsokod 1 points 1 year ago (1 children)

For what it's worth, Hugh mentioned that he was not consulted on this and the silo occupants would not be able to see stars that clearly.

So yeah, probably just a nice star picture they used as a filler without looking into the actual orientation.

https://old.reddit.com/r/SiloSeries/comments/14pmocz/astronomer_here_details_about_silo_location/jqj2dib/

[–] [email protected] 1 points 1 year ago

Yeah the AMA seemed to suggest a lack of attention to detail, aside from Howey's qualms about how the screen was depicted.

But, and this is a big but, if the production knows where the story takes place and if they paid enough attention to detail to the extent that they wanted to make sure that the constellations would match up with the location, then it could still be a hint even if Howey doesn't agree with how clear and unobstructed they made the view on the screen.

But like I said, the AMA didn't suggest they'd go through the trouble of noodling out which stars are supposed to go where.