Oh so pretty,
in PINK!

Gots LOTS more to say, but gotta get my ass down the road.
Later, taters!

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There is actually a much more recent version of Debbie as well.GamePlayer wrote:No, no, no, I was referring to the quote from SandRider and SC. My apologies, I should have quoted them.
It's funny, I always hear about Debbie Does Dallas, but I've never seen that film either. It would probably be horribly dated porn by now. Probably a lot of Palin-esque rainforests walking around
Serkanner wrote:There is actually a much more recent version of Debbie as well.GamePlayer wrote:No, no, no, I was referring to the quote from SandRider and SC. My apologies, I should have quoted them.
It's funny, I always hear about Debbie Does Dallas, but I've never seen that film either. It would probably be horribly dated porn by now. Probably a lot of Palin-esque rainforests walking around
You are kidding, right? It may be the same (wrong) logic (argumentum ad ignorantiam), but in no way the same thing.loremaster wrote:Frank's text makes it obvious computers had never been used to direct foldspace machines. By simple omition. If it were possible, then it would have been mentioned at some point, i feel. (same logic with bene gesserit telekinesis)
Yup. But before the Jihad it would have just been a standard peice of navigation equipment.loremaster wrote: And to ATOE - Wouldnt a computer which could safely navigate and direct a foldspace drive be called an Ixian Navigation Machine .
No - I hate to make a mean joke but I think you forgot about a tinsy tiny part of the Dune history called the Butlerian Jihad. My point is that it is likely that people had foldspace ships at least for some time before the Jihad, likely quite a long time. (why? you try inventing technology that re-shapes spacetime itself without a computer to help you. Kinda tricky.)Navitgation was done by computers. Then the Jihad hits and everyone has to give up their computers. Suddenly, that life-extending/sometimes vision inducing drug found on Dune suddenly looks a lot more interesting, and a few smart folks start up the Spacing Guild - since their the only people who can get from planet to planet without a computer they have an instant monopoly in the post Jihad world.You're not suggesting a KJA-esque "Well we built it, used it to find spice, then forgot about it and invented it all over again" are you?
Frank's text makes it obvious computers had never been used to direct foldspace machines. By simple omition. If it were possible, then it would have been mentioned at some point, i feel. (same logic with bene gesserit telekinesis)
Iff you could manage those technological requirements and accelerate at, say, 1 gee for about seven years, coast for a little over three, and then accelerate at 1 gee in the opposite direction for about seven more years, you could cover that 3500 light years (mentioned above) in about 17.5 years, ship time. (3502 years would pass in the "rest frame", e.g., the planet of launch, etc. You're travelling at just a fraction under c, so you take more time to reach the destination than light itself, observed from rest.)GamePlayer wrote:Attaining c is not possible due to the infinite energy requirements needed to accelerate a mass that fast. But it is possible to obtain speeds fractions of the speed of light, which is what would be used to travel the breadth of the universe. It would take some advanced technology to overcome the hazards of space travel (radiation, micrometeorites, power, fuel, sustainability, et cetera) but it is far more believable than FTL.
Conclusion: if we want to hold to 1g accellerations and decellerations we're going to need some mind boggling "magic" technology. Lesser accellerations would be much more managable, but don't get us those nice fun time dialation effects.distance ----- Stopping at: ----- Kilos of Antimatter
4.3 ly ----- Nearest star ----- 38 kg
27 ly ----- Vega ----- 886 kg
30,000 ly ----- Center of our galaxy ----- 955,000 tonnes
2,000,000 ly ----- Andromeda galaxy ----- 4.2 thousand million tonnes
Wouldn't there be a problem in travelling so close to c, in that any stray particles you encounter on the way will effectively become very high-energy radiation which will cook you and your ship? I seem to remember reading that shielding against this kind of radiation was effectively impossible because of the energies involved.SandChigger wrote:You're travelling at just a fraction under c, so you take more time to reach the destination than light itself, observed from rest.
That's interesting, but I would have thought that you'd only actually need enough AMAT to accelerate to close enough to c to not bother trying to accelerate any more. At that point, you'd switch off the drive, travel in free-fall, and switch it on again much later to decelerate.A Thing of Eternity wrote:This is how much AMAT we'd need per 1 kilo of payload assuming 1g of accelleration for half the trip and 1g of decelleration for the other half(according to the brainiac who wrote the article, I'm good with physics theory, not so much with the math):
Conclusion: if we want to hold to 1g accellerations and decellerations we're going to need some mind boggling "magic" technology. Lesser accellerations would be much more managable, but don't get us those nice fun time dialation effects.distance ----- Stopping at: ----- Kilos of Antimatter
4.3 ly ----- Nearest star ----- 38 kg
27 ly ----- Vega ----- 886 kg
30,000 ly ----- Center of our galaxy ----- 955,000 tonnes
2,000,000 ly ----- Andromeda galaxy ----- 4.2 thousand million tonnes
Nothing solid, and nothing I can back up with math, but Clarke figured (in Songs of Distant Earth) with a nice huge block of ice for sheilding about 0.5c would be do-able from a radiation/particle sheilding standpoint but still very risky if you hit bigger objects. He admitted did invent a crazy propusion system to get up to that speed though, called a quantum ramjet which would use the "power of vacuum".Hunchback Jack wrote:Great summary, Chig. Interesting to see these kind of calculations.
Wouldn't there be a problem in travelling so close to c, in that any stray particles you encounter on the way will effectively become very high-energy radiation which will cook you and your ship? I seem to remember reading that shielding against this kind of radiation was effectively impossible because of the energies involved.SandChigger wrote:You're travelling at just a fraction under c, so you take more time to reach the destination than light itself, observed from rest.
(There's also the problem of being able to accelerate a mass travelling at, say, 0.8c by 1 gravity, but we'll assume we have harnessed KJA's crud-producing energy to that end)
I don't know what speeds are "safe" with respect to radiation; any takers?
The two advantages are 1: comfort of course, like you said, and 2: when you get past 0.99c is when relativity really starts to kick in big time, so if you can afford to keep accellerating it will shave serious "shiptime" off of your trip. You are right though, it is the relative speed that causes the dialation, not the acceleration itself.That's interesting, but I would have thought that you'd only actually need enough AMAT to accelerate to close enough to c to not bother trying to accelerate any more. At that point, you'd switch off the drive, travel in free-fall, and switch it on again much later to decelerate.A Thing of Eternity wrote:This is how much AMAT we'd need per 1 kilo of payload assuming 1g of accelleration for half the trip and 1g of decelleration for the other half(according to the brainiac who wrote the article, I'm good with physics theory, not so much with the math):
Conclusion: if we want to hold to 1g accellerations and decellerations we're going to need some mind boggling "magic" technology. Lesser accellerations would be much more managable, but don't get us those nice fun time dialation effects.distance ----- Stopping at: ----- Kilos of Antimatter
4.3 ly ----- Nearest star ----- 38 kg
27 ly ----- Vega ----- 886 kg
30,000 ly ----- Center of our galaxy ----- 955,000 tonnes
2,000,000 ly ----- Andromeda galaxy ----- 4.2 thousand million tonnes
Is there any advantage to continuing to accelerate once you're very close to c? (Other than comfort) I thought it was the relative speed that causes time dilation, not the acceleration.
HBJ
I made a Javascript webpage I call "Travel Planner"Hunchback Jack wrote:Great summary, Chig. Interesting to see these kind of calculations.
Thang has already answered this. The speed produces the dialation; the acceleration only increases the speed. The 1 gee (9.81 m/s^2) figure wasn't to provide a comfortable environment so much as an acceleration that would probably be non-stressing for crews/colonists over extended periods. (I forget how many gees humans can stand and for how long, but long-term the health effects are probably adverse.) With that limit on acceleration, the time you have to accelerate to reach a given speed becomes longer.Is there any advantage to continuing to accelerate once you're very close to c? (Other than comfort) I thought it was the relative speed that causes time dilation, not the acceleration.