I don't recall any sort of quote like this in any of the books I've read. Think you could come up with one?Dahak wrote:That's the beauty of Impellers in Honorverse.Beowulf wrote:You're probably looking to see how much energy a Honorverse ship needs to be able to accelerate to their maximum STL speed, right?
It's more than could possibly be provided using fusion, assuming the mass fraction isn't obscenely tilted towards fuel.
The energy necessary to accel a ship doesn't come from the ship at all. All the ship does is to power the Impeller nodes generating the wedges. The energy for accel comes from hyperspace
Energy question
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Yes, and no. Yes as in real life that is the case. No as in for this model we are using Newtonian mechanics, which does not take into account relativity.Crayz9000 wrote:It's a power curve approaching infinite power as you approach the limit of c.
The most basic assumption about the world is that it does not contradict itself.
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Does that mean we can't ever travel at the speed of light?Crayz9000 wrote:It's a power curve approaching infinite power as you approach the limit of c.
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That is correct.Queeb Salaron wrote:Does that mean we can't ever travel at the speed of light?Crayz9000 wrote:It's a power curve approaching infinite power as you approach the limit of c.
And wicked pilot? You almost always want to be using relativistic mechanics when dealing with space flight.
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You *always* use relativity in space flight. Without taking into account relativity, GPS and satellite communication would be impossible. But for the sake of this discussion board, relavity is slightly too complex. Good ol' Newtonian mechanics will do here.Beowulf wrote:And wicked pilot? You almost always want to be using relativistic mechanics when dealing with space flight.
The most basic assumption about the world is that it does not contradict itself.
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That's right. The only way to travel at the speed of light is to have no mass. And the only way you can have no mass is to encounter your antimatter self and be converted into gamma ray photons.Queeb Salaron wrote:Does that mean we can't ever travel at the speed of light?Crayz9000 wrote:It's a power curve approaching infinite power as you approach the limit of c.
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Right... well, I'm only taking calculus right now, not calculus with physics. So I'm only interested in the theoretical at the moment
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Queeb Salaron wrote:Does that mean we can't ever travel at the speed of light?Crayz9000 wrote:It's a power curve approaching infinite power as you approach the limit of c.
Of course not. Not unless you lose a LOT of weight.
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Even if we could have mass lightening i wouldnt want it. Imagine if all the subatomic particles in your body had no mass but finite energy. thats infinite speed! you'd explode!Terwynn wrote:That's right. The only way to travel at the speed of light is to have no mass. And the only way you can have no mass is to encounter your antimatter self and be converted into gamma ray photons.
Sì! Abbiamo un' anima! Ma è fatta di tanti piccoli robot.