Thanks to the dazzling abilities of US, it is possible to produce accurate ephemerides for all kinds of astronomical bodies, even the ones with chaotic long term behavior.
The US ephemerides will be at the core of my Cinderdar Observatory project which aims at rendering a realistic representation of a ring galaxy.
For the project I made a galaxy generator for Celestia which allows me to render a little less than one million (yes: you read well... ) stars along with their planets and moons. Obviously it will not be possible to simulate the motions of such a huge number of bodies, but at least the closest ones. By 'closest', I mean to a given reference point of observation in the Rosphevron system.
Take a look of those two pictures: you see here the dual binary star systems Rosphevron (AC)-(BD). The snapshots are taken 2 years apart (2010 and 2012), from more or less the same direction in both Celestia (right side) and Universe Sandbox (left side). It would be impossible to make this with Celestia alone, because it doesn't handle the proper motions of stars. But US makes it possible, I just had to convert the Cartesian coordinates produced by US into spherical ones and feed them into Celestia.