Here’s how it works… it has a hemisphere (11” stainless bowl from Ikea- great for these and vandegraf generators) that’s completely matte black inside so theres no reflection or stray light getting out. It sits on top of a round stand (a cookie tin) also painted matte black that holds the electronics (led driver, switch, barrel connector for the power supply). The lid of the tin holds the led and heat sink (a big one…that little led is rated for 1W and I’m driving it at probably 4W to get useful light out of it). The bowl has hundreds tiny .3mm to .5mm holes (i drilled them all-broke 5 drill bits took days) that make the constellations (all of the ones we have in the western hemisphere). Is super cool and cost like $20 usd to make. The light from the led goes through the holes and projects the stars. It dies this becauase there’s no light being reflected or bouncing around inside the dome, which also helps the light to pass through each hole. The emitter distance also influences the The light source determines the brightness, size, shape, and color of the stars, so it’s a mirror image of the emitter surface/shape, it just gets bigger the farther the light is protected.

I tried 2 different leds and that’s how i found out the issue with square or multi die emitters. I could use a diffuser over the emitter and that would help, but it would reduce the intensity of the light. The best led for this is a round, small, and crazy bright! I have yet to find one…