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GENERAL DISCUSSIONS
Science and mistakes in Firefly: Ask your questions.
Monday, August 29, 2005 12:38 PM
R1Z
Quote:Jayne and his Oxygen-breathing gun really make cringe. Serenity is approaching this ring-thing at probably unimaginable velocities by today’s standards and Jayne just pops his head out the airlock and shoots at it (from the hip no less!). Popular science fiction. Even the best of it is queer.
Monday, August 29, 2005 12:48 PM
Quote:I really like the "Magically Appearing Dolly" that was utilized on the air ambulance that Kaylee and Wash fixed up. You know, the one they used to break into the hospital on Ariel. Yaah, it's really neat -- 'cause see, when the ambulance is flying around on it's nighttime journey to the hospital, you can clearly see that it's got no "Magically Appearing Dolly" (MAD, in the lingo of the biz) hanging underneath it. Even when it first lands on the hospital's landing pad, it's not there. But as soon as our BDH's need to get out of, or climb into, or hang around and make jokes and small talk in front of the air ambulance, you can see that the MAD has materialized right beneath the landing pads, or feet, of the ambulance. It's really kinda cool! I mean, it musta been something ol' Wash and Kaylee designed into the thing for a reason, right? Probably some super-secret stealth technology that Kaylee whipped up when she wasn't fighting off the Magical Space Monkeys (MSM's fer short) or some such. You know, a MAD that increases the height of your special air ambulance so your BDH's can all be in frame (and won't hit their heads on an air ambulance that's a little too low to the ground). Yep, I do LOVE those "Magically Appearing Dollies" that come equipped on every jury-rigged air ambulance in the Firefly 'verse. Yessiree! (Relaxes and waits. Thinks to self: "Man, I gotta hear this one.")
Monday, August 29, 2005 1:06 PM
SHORNY
Monday, August 29, 2005 1:50 PM
Quote:in Objects in Space- Early (Earlie?) is not wearing gloves while he is out in space looking in as the crew is sitting around talking about River (you can see his left hand). This has always bugged me. I know he is tough, but how can he survive such cold temperatures as those found in space.
Monday, August 29, 2005 2:12 PM
GREENFAERIE
Quote:Originally posted by chrisisall: Quote:Originally posted by GunRunner: Quote:Originally posted by chrisisall: First off, let me say there are no mistakes in Firefly. Oh really. In the pilot Serenity and the Reaver ship are traveling very slowly when they should be going very fast. Joss has admitted that this is a mistake! ...I see it as a narrative choice, not a technical mistake (Galactica is guilty of this constantly). Joss was mistaken; it's not a mistake... DOP Chrisisall
Quote:Originally posted by GunRunner: Quote:Originally posted by chrisisall: First off, let me say there are no mistakes in Firefly. Oh really. In the pilot Serenity and the Reaver ship are traveling very slowly when they should be going very fast. Joss has admitted that this is a mistake!
Quote:Originally posted by chrisisall: First off, let me say there are no mistakes in Firefly.
Monday, August 29, 2005 2:13 PM
CITIZEN
Quote:Originally posted by Chrisisall: Doesn't putting the ENTIRE population in SA seem a little undo-able? You're talkin' BILLIONS fer cryin' out loud!!! No, the OWSUMEJ Gate is the only answer. SA would be limited to a few hundred thousand at best. Are you suggesting most were left to die on Earth-that-was? And that the FF galaxy is populated by under a million at this point? Or has enough time passed for a few hundred thousand to grow into billions? GIVE ME DATA SO I CAN BUY YOUR THEORY! (the OWSUMEJ Gate sounds too much like Stargate....)
Quote:The [[]year[]]2000 growth rate of 1.4 percent, when applied to the world's 6.1 billion population, yields an annual increase of about 85 million people.
Monday, August 29, 2005 2:15 PM
CALONRIEL
Quote:Originally posted by chrisisall: Quote:Originally posted by calonriel: Yep, I do LOVE those "Magically Appearing Dollies" that come equipped on every jury-rigged air ambulance in the Firefly 'verse. Yessiree! Sorry to give a mundane answer like this, but the dollies a provided by the hospital; check out Zoe grabbing one as she almost goes off camera after she gets out of the ambulance, and the shadows of 'em are also visible on the pad as the copter lands on the lower left and right of the screen. YFC Chrisisall
Quote:Originally posted by calonriel: Yep, I do LOVE those "Magically Appearing Dollies" that come equipped on every jury-rigged air ambulance in the Firefly 'verse. Yessiree!
Quote:Originally posted by R1Z: The MAD is called a gurney in the catalogs, and a "cart" by the hospital staff and even here, on Earth that will be "Earth that was" they stay parked just inside the door at the ambulance entrance, along with wheelchairs.
Monday, August 29, 2005 2:21 PM
CHRISISALL
Quote:Originally posted by R1Z: Then there's a shot where we see part of his helmet and his bare pink RIGHT hand as we look out the ports from inside the ship. Let's see what His Firefly-like Correctness has in his arsenal to explain how Jubal avoids frostbite. Chris??
Monday, August 29, 2005 2:23 PM
Quote:Originally posted by R1Z: Quote:in Objects in Space- Early (Earlie?) is not wearing gloves while he is out in space looking in as the crew is sitting around talking about River (you can see his left hand). This has always bugged me. I know he is tough, but how can he survive such cold temperatures as those found in space. Good One!!! I never noticed that before. Just watched it again--Jubal has gloves that match his suit on when he seals the hatch on his ship and jumps to Serenity. Then there's a shot where we see part of his helmet and his bare pink RIGHT hand as we look out the ports from inside the ship. The next shot I see Jubal in is him holding a contact microphone to Serenity's hull with his gloved left hand, the camera follows the wire up to his helmet. Let's see what His Firefly-like Correctness has in his arsenal to explain how Jubal avoids frostbite. Chris?? To enjoy the flavor of life, take big bites. Moderation is for monks. --Robt. Heinlein
Monday, August 29, 2005 2:29 PM
Quote:Originally posted by calonriel: How does Zoë go and "grab one" if she can't get out of the ambulance until it's landed -- yet the dolly is already under the ambulance when it lands?!? Besides, immediately before the ambulance lands we see in the long shot that there's nothing sitting on the landing pad. Hence my term: "Magically Appearing"!
Monday, August 29, 2005 2:33 PM
Quote:There was a period of 450 years to concentrate on population growth. There is a new generation every 25 years. The goverment breeding programs required couples to have three to six children (assuming an average of four).
Monday, August 29, 2005 2:42 PM
Monday, August 29, 2005 2:53 PM
Quote:Originally posted by citizen: So we end up with a 'verse with a population of ~3,503,250,000, or three and a half Billion people, starting with 4,000,000 colonists. And thats my theory...
Monday, August 29, 2005 3:25 PM
Quote:Originally posted by chrisisall: Quote:Originally posted by calonriel: How does Zoë go and "grab one" if she can't get out of the ambulance until it's landed -- yet the dolly is already under the ambulance when it lands?!? Besides, immediately before the ambulance lands we see in the long shot that there's nothing sitting on the landing pad. Hence my term: "Magically Appearing"!Look again: the ambulance lands - Zoe gets out - she moves to the right, going almost totally out of camera, next shot she's in she has a cart. The landing shot just before that has two shadows (undefined as they may be, groups of 'dollies' can't be rulled out)on the bottom left, and the bottom right, visible just before the shot ends. I HATE TO REPEAT MYSELF!!!! Agitated YFC Chrisisall
Monday, August 29, 2005 3:54 PM
Monday, August 29, 2005 4:57 PM
Quote:Originally posted by citizen: You stupid wooman! Can you not see that it is mearly the landing pad locking mechanism that prevents the ambulance falling off and getting lost or stolen? ('Allo 'Allo humour, if you haven't seen 'Allo 'Allo, I pity you, I really do...) The ambulance is guided in by automatic control, lands on the landing pad, and then the locking assembly rises out of the pad and locks the landing gear in place... Dolly indeed, anyone would think that it wasn't a real working flying ambulance from the future, and that it had to be wheeled about some kind of film set... As Chrisisall would say DUH! Q: What do you have when you are holding two little green balls in your hand. A: Kermit's undivided attention.
Monday, August 29, 2005 5:24 PM
ANTHONYT
Freedom is Important because People are Important
Monday, August 29, 2005 5:27 PM
ROCKETJOCK
Monday, August 29, 2005 6:53 PM
Quote:Not that this thread takes itself seriously... Re: Vera Overlooking that the writers got it wrong... But Jayne does not say anything about Vera needing oxygen to fire. He says Vera needs 'air' around her to fire. This opens up the discussion as to 'why' to considerably more options than if he had said 'oxygen.' Discuss. --Anthony
Monday, August 29, 2005 7:14 PM
Monday, August 29, 2005 7:45 PM
RIVERNOT
Quote:Originally posted by Shorny: in Objects in Space-...
Monday, August 29, 2005 9:54 PM
Quote:Originally posted by Calonriel: (I'm male, by the way, but no matter!)
Monday, August 29, 2005 11:30 PM
Tuesday, August 30, 2005 5:37 AM
Tuesday, August 30, 2005 5:44 AM
REAVERCHOW
Tuesday, August 30, 2005 5:50 AM
Quote:Originally posted by citizen: Actually chris, i've just thought of a sciency question, and its all together un-mistaky too. What shipborne weapons do you think they use in the 'verse, just thinking about it while I'm at work, I mean what else am I going to do at work? We've seen energy weapons used at least once in the series by the Dortmunder I think it was, to destroy the derelict in Bushwhacked. Its that green energy beam and you see pulses go down the beam and hit the derelict pretty much cutting it in two. So what is that weapon and how does it operate? How powerfull is it? What other shipborne weapons do they use in the 'verse?
Tuesday, August 30, 2005 6:21 AM
Quote:Originally posted by reaverchow: Maybe he had magnetic boots??? Oh his boots were in loops....or whatever they are called - attached to the hull.
Quote:Originally posted by reaverchow: And another...my major sci-fi pet peeve (only Babylon-5 has got this right so far, and even they fracked up in "Legend of the Rangers") - any civilization that has artifical gravity wouldn't need reaction based drives (rockets, ion, *fusion* - like Firefly - and even steam - yes, *steam*) they could just turn the gravity field on it's side and go MUCH MUCH faster than conventional reaction based propulsion. Fast enough to reach another star pretty quickly. And like someone else said, they probably could even build warp drives, wormholes, etc...)
Quote:Originally posted by Reaverchow: But they would experice relativistic time dialation if he went at STL (Slower Than Light) speeds...this means that a journey taking hundreds of years from the view of the outside universe, would only take only decades or less ship's time. So the 500 years could be measured since the arrival.
Quote:Originally posted by Reaverchow: My only HUGE complaint is the solar system model - all of thoe "70 Earths") and their accompanying gas giants would have to ocuppy a narrow habitable zone around the star called "The Goldilocks Zone", and they'd be constantly bumping into each other, and most been destroyed billions of years ago.
Quote:Originally posted by reaverchow: And bigger star might have a bigger zone, but I hear that most non-sun-like stars can't support Earth-like planets. (I don't know why, and I *should*.) Anyway, we clearly always saw a yellow sun.
Quote:In general, the conditions needed to support the type of large carbon-based life found on Earth may require an inner rocky planet that is orbiting a star in its so-called "habitable zone." Such zones are bounded by the range of distances from a star for which liquid water can exist on a planetary surface, depending on such additional factors as the nature and density of its atmosphere and its surface gravity. In addition, the range of star types that can support Earth-type life on rocky planets may be limited to those lower mass stars that "live" long enough for planets to form and complex life to evolve.
Quote:Originally posted by reaverchow: And as for the breeding program - they can't feed the people they have already! Why make more? But I like the idea of having a few teen brides! (I keed. I keed.) well...maybe *18*...
Quote:Originally posted by reaverchow: Oh, and I haven't seen the movie, but there *is* a planet that looks alot like a decimated Earth in the promo - don't know if it's in the film..perhaps there is a perminate stable wormhole between here and there?
Select to view spoiler:
Tuesday, August 30, 2005 6:38 AM
Quote:Okay, this isn't a scientific issue, well maybe it could be if it were like the MADs/landing skids grippers in Ariel, but what about the ladder that Jubal used to get into Serenity? Granted, I haven't had my DVDs for quite a while (my mom won't send them back, grumble, grumble) so I've no way to check, but I seem to remember that the ladder he used to get into the ship, which is in the corner of the short corridor between the stairs and the corridor between the galley and the bridge (got that?), isn't there in any other episode. How do you explain that one, or am I misremembering.
Tuesday, August 30, 2005 7:12 AM
Tuesday, August 30, 2005 8:18 AM
Quote:Originally posted by R1Z: Quote:Granted, I haven't had my DVDs for quite a while (my mom won't send them back, grumble, grumble) After she carried you for nine months, you begrudge that poor woman a copy of Firefly? Shame on you. Even Jayne sends money home to his mother.
Quote:Granted, I haven't had my DVDs for quite a while (my mom won't send them back, grumble, grumble)
Tuesday, August 30, 2005 9:20 AM
Quote:Originally posted by GreenFaerie: I hate to burst your bubble, Chrisisall (because until yesterday I liked your explanation best), but according to the official Serenity RPG (approved by Whedon himself), it was generation ships that made the flight from Earth-that-was. No jumpgate.
Quote:Originally posted by GreenFaerie: Also according to the RPG, the Firefly 'verse is made up of a star system containing a few stars each with their own planets.
Quote:Originally posted by GreenFaerie: The ship is also said to be "inertialess" but only able to reach 2% of light-speed. That one that doesn't make a lot of sense, but there could be a reason...
Tuesday, August 30, 2005 9:21 AM
Quote:Originally posted by citizen: Quote:Originally posted by reaverchow: Maybe he had magnetic boots??? Oh his boots were in loops....or whatever they are called - attached to the hull. Magnetic boots of course.
Quote: Quote:Originally posted by reaverchow: And another...my major sci-fi pet peeve (only Babylon-5 has got this right so far, and even they fracked up in "Legend of the Rangers") - any civilization that has artifical gravity wouldn't need reaction based drives (rockets, ion, *fusion* - like Firefly - and even steam - yes, *steam*) they could just turn the gravity field on it's side and go MUCH MUCH faster than conventional reaction based propulsion. Fast enough to reach another star pretty quickly. And like someone else said, they probably could even build warp drives, wormholes, etc...) I mentioned the aculbier warp earlier I think. The problem with gravitational drives (ignoring the aculbier warp) is the fact they can't break the light barrier and would crush people on board with inertia and opposing gravitational tides...
Quote: Wormholes require more than just gravity to form, in order to become stable they need exotic matter and negative energy fields.
Quote: Its also perfectly possible to generate gravity with a conventional drive. You just accelerate at a constant 1g .
Quote: Quote:Originally posted by Reaverchow: But they would experice relativistic time dialation if he went at STL (Slower Than Light) speeds...this means that a journey taking hundreds of years from the view of the outside universe, would only take only decades or less ship's time. So the 500 years could be measured since the arrival. Relativistic time dialation is only really noticable at relativistic speeds (speeds approaching the speed of light). Your talk tau getting very close to 0. Beyond that see my earlier post on intestellar travel.
Quote: Quote:Originally posted by Reaverchow: My only HUGE complaint is the solar system model - all of thoe "70 Earths") and their accompanying gas giants would have to ocuppy a narrow habitable zone around the star called "The Goldilocks Zone", and they'd be constantly bumping into each other, and most been destroyed billions of years ago. Well most of thoes are moons of the gas giants and bigger planets . In fact there is probably no more than twenty planetary bodies in the habitable zone, the rest is moons. Its not a stretch if you look at the numbers.
Quote: Quote:Originally posted by reaverchow: And bigger star might have a bigger zone, but I hear that most non-sun-like stars can't support Earth-like planets. (I don't know why, and I *should*.) Anyway, we clearly always saw a yellow sun. Yep, but the habitable zone is a corridor in the region of 606 Million miles... fair amount of room there, given the fact that planets may not necessarilly have planar orbits if they're captured bodies. As for the why:
Quote: Quote:In general, the conditions needed to support the type of large carbon-based life found on Earth may require an inner rocky planet that is orbiting a star in its so-called "habitable zone." Such zones are bounded by the range of distances from a star for which liquid water can exist on a planetary surface, depending on such additional factors as the nature and density of its atmosphere and its surface gravity. In addition, the range of star types that can support Earth-type life on rocky planets may be limited to those lower mass stars that "live" long enough for planets to form and complex life to evolve. http://www.solstation.com/stars/4planets.htm
Quote: Quote:Originally posted by reaverchow: And as for the breeding program - they can't feed the people they have already! Why make more? But I like the idea of having a few teen brides! (I keed. I keed.) well...maybe *18*... Huh? The breeding program was after the exodus, between that time and the time of FireFly... it would be essential to rebuild the Human race.
Quote: Quote:Originally posted by reaverchow: Oh, and I haven't seen the movie, but there *is* a planet that looks alot like a decimated Earth in the promo - don't know if it's in the film..perhaps there is a perminate stable wormhole between here and there? Don't say I didn't warn ya: Select to view spoiler:The Earth features as a short background story shot with ships leaving for the new system. It also mentions not everybody left the Earth.
Quote: As for the other thing do you have any idea how unlikely any wormhole naturally occuring is, let alone a stable one? Especially one that just happened to go where we needed it, its more unlikely than the star system in the first place, basically... I mean... DUH ...
Tuesday, August 30, 2005 10:30 AM
Quote:Originally posted by reaverchow: Can't break the light barrier, but can accelerate and travel very fast. Not sure what you mean by the inertia crushing people - do you mean by the acceleration? Can't you also use the grav generators to cancel that out? Gravitational tides I didn't consider (especially opposing ones from the ships artifical own internal gravity)...even if you put the grav engines on long booms.... But isn't that what an Alcubierre Warp Drive does....warp space in front of and behind the ship to create movement? And gravity is just a warp in space....also, you would need exotic matter and neg pressure to create one of those too....
Quote:Originally posted by Reaverchow: Well, I thought they could form in rotating black holes...
Quote:Originally posted by reaverchow: And pretty close to light if I remember. But I thought we speculated on some kind of ship that could go that speed....
Quote:Originally posted by reaverchow: 20 still seems like alot. But I guess if you assume a multiple suns system, that number drops per star. I ain't so good at orbital dynamics, but it would seem that here would be some collisions eventually (esp for gas giants big enough to have Earth sized moons - which they would need for Earth-like gravity)
Quote:Originally posted by Reaverchow: Yeah, I know...a MASSIVE stable wormhole that just magically happens to go to a system of terraformable planets...and there are unicorns there too!
Tuesday, August 30, 2005 11:19 AM
Quote:Originally posted by citizen: Quote:Originally posted by reaverchow: Not sure what you mean by the inertia crushing people - do you mean by the acceleration? Can't you also use the grav generators to cancel that out? Gravitational tides I didn't consider (especially opposing ones from the ships artifical own internal gravity)...even if you put the grav engines on long booms.... But isn't that what an Alcubierre Warp Drive does....warp space in front of and behind the ship to create movement? And gravity is just a warp in space....also, you would need exotic matter and neg pressure to create one of those too.... In an alcubierre warp the ship is held within a completely 'flat' area of space-time within the space-warp bubble... As for the rest your right, the AW is impractical even if it is possible, simply because by some estimates it would take more energy to warp space in that way than the enitre rest mass energy of our universe . I'm not entirely sure you could use gravity to counteract inertia, cause all those different gravitational fields pulling this way and that could likely rip the ship apart.
Quote:Originally posted by reaverchow: Not sure what you mean by the inertia crushing people - do you mean by the acceleration? Can't you also use the grav generators to cancel that out? Gravitational tides I didn't consider (especially opposing ones from the ships artifical own internal gravity)...even if you put the grav engines on long booms.... But isn't that what an Alcubierre Warp Drive does....warp space in front of and behind the ship to create movement? And gravity is just a warp in space....also, you would need exotic matter and neg pressure to create one of those too....
Quote: Quote:Originally posted by Reaverchow: Well, I thought they could form in rotating black holes... Possibly, very if: Because of its two event horizons, it might be possible to avoid hitting the singularity of a spinning black hole. At the outer event horizon, the properties of spacetime allow objects to move only towards the singularity. However, when an object passes the inner event horizon, the object is able to move in directions away from the singularity, pass through another set of inner and outer event horizons, and emerge out of the black hole into another universe or another part of this universe without traveling faster than the speed of light (following a time-like path).
Quote: Quote:Originally posted by reaverchow: 20 still seems like alot. But I guess if you assume a multiple suns system, that number drops per star. I ain't so good at orbital dynamics, but it would seem that here would be some collisions eventually (esp for gas giants big enough to have Earth sized moons - which they would need for Earth-like gravity) This was disscussed in another thread, and I believe it was KayleeIsAll who did the math, essentially nature would generate a stable orbit.
Quote: Quote:Originally posted by Reaverchow: Yeah, I know...a MASSIVE stable wormhole that just magically happens to go to a system of terraformable planets...and there are unicorns there too! Well what do you expect when you follow elves riding on the back of dragons?
Tuesday, August 30, 2005 11:28 AM
Tuesday, August 30, 2005 11:37 AM
Quote:Originally posted by reaverchow: That's right ship stays still relative to the space around it, space *itself* moves. So it doesn't violate Relativity (was that General or Special? I always forget....)
Quote:Originally posted by reaverchow: We just need a smart engineer to make it work!
Quote:Originally posted by reaverchow: Bottom line is, FTL travel/communication would mean time travel, and the posibility causality violations....nature may forbid that...then again, it may happen all the time!
Quote:Originally posted by reaverchow: Sure. At one g....shouldn't be a problem....just need LOTS of fuel....and fuel to accelerate the mass of the fuel.... ;) Unless you didn't carry he fuel like in a ramjet... But could a Bussard scoop up that much intersteller hydrogen to keep up that kind of acceleration *constantly*?
Quote:Originally posted by reaverchow: Oh, and I forget....colser to c (lightspeed) you get, more massive the ship gets, more fuel you need to propell it. 'course, in a ramjet, faster you go, more fuel you collect....('till you hit a bit of space dust and explode!)
Tuesday, August 30, 2005 11:42 AM
Quote:Originally posted by GreenFaerie: according to the official Serenity RPG (approved by Whedon himself), it was generation ships that made the flight from Earth-that-was. No jumpgate.
Tuesday, August 30, 2005 11:58 AM
Quote:Originally posted by chrisisall: Quote:Originally posted by GreenFaerie: according to the official Serenity RPG (approved by Whedon himself), it was generation ships that made the flight from Earth-that-was. No jumpgate. Ah, well, It was just an explanation that I thought possible. Am I supposed to KNOW EVERYTHING?!?~!!!???
Quote: As of right now I abdicate my know-it-all title; the experts are all around here! Thanks citizen and R1Z, and everyone else; this thread is way more interesting than I could have made it all by myself! Let's keep it up!
Tuesday, August 30, 2005 11:59 AM
Tuesday, August 30, 2005 1:28 PM
Quote:Originally posted by citizen: Your still the YFC Chris, just now you got dedicated science monkeys to do your bidding ...
Tuesday, August 30, 2005 1:45 PM
Wednesday, August 31, 2005 5:28 AM
Quote:Originally posted by Reaverchow: And as for ripping the ship apart...yeah...good point....what if we made a ship that pulled in one direction, and made the interior artifical gravity align along that direction? Heck, or even used the same gravity field for both? So all the pull was in one direction. (Travelers would be going forward feet first, I guess.) Would that work?
Quote:Originally posted by Reaverchow: Sure. At one g....shouldn't be a problem....just need LOTS of fuel....and fuel to accelerate the mass of the fuel.... ;) Unless you didn't carry he fuel like in a ramjet... But could a Bussard scoop up that much intersteller hydrogen to keep up that kind of acceleration *constantly*? ... Oh, and I forget....colser to c (lightspeed) you get, more massive the ship gets, more fuel you need to propell it. 'course, in a ramjet, faster you go, more fuel you collect....('till you hit a bit of space dust and explode!)
Quote:The Bussard ramjet was proposed by R.W. Bussard in 1960. The original vehicle collects charged particles from interstellar space using a large magnetic scoop, and funnels them to the onboard H-He fusion reactor, where they are converted to fuel. According to Bussard's calculations, a 1000 ton starship with a 100% reactor efficiency, which collects fuel from a medium with 1 charged nucleon/cubic centimetre would accelerate almost indefinitely at 1g. In a year the craft would reach the speed of light and in the subjective lifetime of the crew it would also reach the end of the Universe. The diameter of the scoop would need to be 100 km for this 1000 ton vehicle, if it is to move through a space medium with a density of 1000 atoms/cm3.
Wednesday, August 31, 2005 5:34 AM
Thursday, September 1, 2005 7:47 PM
FINN MAC CUMHAL
Quote:Originally posted by perfessergee: So, YoSafBrig-type operatives would have to match vectors, at least approximately, leaving the field clear for sharpshooters like Jayne. Who could probably have done it with a 30-06. But that's what Big Damn Heroes are for......
Quote:Originally posted by citizen: As for ships meeting each other in the black, the distances aren't that great at all, at least not on a galaxtic scale.
Thursday, September 1, 2005 10:47 PM
Quote:Originally posted by Finn Mac Cumhal: A particular ships trajectory along these “space lanes” would be quite unique and a function of the departure time and initial velocity of the particular ship in question. Even along a matched trajectory towards the same destination there could be distances of thousands of miles between ships, along the same area of corridor. How far away does a ship need to be before you can resolve it with the unaided eye? Even a large ship, I would say less then 10 miles, anything further is likely to appear as nothing more then a moving white dot against a background of stars, if it is visible at all. It just seems so unlikely to me that one would ever find another ship just meander past.
Wednesday, September 7, 2005 9:22 PM
RYAN786I
Wednesday, September 7, 2005 10:45 PM
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