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I'm trying to use Three.js to generate some points with Three.Points, and then make the points themselves revolve around a single point (or mesh). I've generated the points randomly in a cylinder region as mentioned in this answer and reviewed posts such as this one, which doesn't seem to work as it's rotating a mesh around a mesh.

Here's what I've got so far:

//Mesh that is to be revolved around
const blackHoleGeometry = new THREE.SphereGeometry(10, 64, 64);

const blackHoleMaterial = new THREE.MeshBasicMaterial({
    color: 0x000000
});

const blackHole = new THREE.Mesh(blackHoleGeometry, blackHoleMaterial);
scene.add(blackHole);

//Points that are supposed to revolve around the mesh

const particles = new THREE.PointsMaterial({
    color: 0xffffff
});

const geometry = new THREE.Geometry();

// [...] code to generate random points

const pointCloud = new THREE.Points(geometry, particles);
pointCloud.rotation.x = Math.PI / 2; //to rotate it 90*

You can see a full demo here. How can I have the points all revolve around the sphere mesh, as in each vertex of the point "cloud"'s geometry revolving around a center point, or the mesh like a planet and a star?

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  • Er, what do you mean by "rotate around a mesh"? By definition, you can't rotate points around anything other than a line (though that line may be defined by a point and the point you're rotating).
    – anon
    Mar 19, 2017 at 1:18
  • I think that your terminology might be what's tripping you up. Your black hole is a sphere, but you can't 'rotate' around a sphere, you need an axis. if your axis passes through your sphere's centre point then it'll look like it orbits the sphere. This might help stackoverflow.com/questions/11060734/…
    – Ben
    Mar 19, 2017 at 1:30
  • @QPaysTaxes What would happen if you rotate a point about the line defined by a point and the point itself? Exactly! The point won't move at all. Mar 19, 2017 at 1:30
  • @Ben Thanks so much for the link and the info!
    – Andrew Li
    Mar 19, 2017 at 1:31
  • @frederick99 Er, I'm confused. Were you trying to ping Andrew?
    – anon
    Mar 19, 2017 at 1:31

1 Answer 1

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Couple problems with you code, but here is an updated fiddle for you: https://jsfiddle.net/pwwkght0/2/

So when you create your Three.js scene you want to keep all of your code in the init function. So I moved everything in there and then I called init outside of the variable. When you do this, init will create you scene until it reaches the last line and call animate. You want to call animate instead of render because animate will request animation frames and call render on each.

function init() {
    //do all the things to make the scene

    function animate() {
        requestAnimationFrame(animate);
        orbit();
        controls.update();
        render();
    }

    function render() {
        renderer.render(scene, camera);
    }

    animate();
}

init()

So now that you are requesting animation frames, it's time to make things orbit. I made a very simple function to grab your point cloud and rotate it on its z-axis, to simulate it rotating around the sphere. Notice how orbit is called in animate:

function orbit() {
    pointCloud.rotation.z += 0.01;
}

You can take this a step further and have each point rotate at a different speed around the sphere by accessing pointCloud's children property.

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