Bug or Ooniverse physics I need to research?
Moderators: winston, another_commander
Bug or Ooniverse physics I need to research?
I can spend 46 hours in a hyperspace jump, but it's still not enough time for weapons to cool, or shields to regenerate.
Why is this so?
Is there some Ooniverse physics I need to research? OR Heaven forbid, a bug?
Why is this so?
Is there some Ooniverse physics I need to research? OR Heaven forbid, a bug?
- Smivs
- Retired Assassin
- Posts: 8408
- Joined: Tue Feb 09, 2010 11:31 am
- Location: Lost in space
- Contact:
Re: Bug or Ooniverse physics I need to research?
Because time is sort of suspended in hyperspace. You are not aware of the passage of time are you, so lasers and shields aren't either. That's why your ship's clock has to adjust when you exit hyperspace.
Commander Smivs, the friendliest Gourd this side of Riedquat.
-
- Quite Grand Sub-Admiral
- Posts: 6682
- Joined: Wed Feb 28, 2007 7:54 am
Re: Bug or Ooniverse physics I need to research?
From my perspective, a hyperspace jump lasts only a few seconds for the pilot, the seconds it takes to traverse the wormhole. When the ship emerges back to normal space, the ship clock has to be synchronized with universal time, because time inside the wormhole flows differently to the time outside of it. I'll leave the scientific explanation to the Relativistic / Temporal Physics lecturers at Lave University.
So, since only a few seconds have passed inside the wormhole, it makes sense that the lasers don't have enough time to cool down.
So, since only a few seconds have passed inside the wormhole, it makes sense that the lasers don't have enough time to cool down.
- DaddyHoggy
- Intergalactic Spam Assassin
- Posts: 8515
- Joined: Tue Dec 05, 2006 9:43 pm
- Location: Newbury, UK
- Contact:
Re: Bug or Ooniverse physics I need to research?
For the Hyperspace conduit to exist you effectively enter a hyper-dimensional non-space that joins two points of "normal" space together, since this conduit cannot exist in a universe where normal physics apply... therefore normal physics do not apply...galpet wrote:I can spend 46 hours in a hyperspace jump, but it's still not enough time for weapons to cool, or shields to regenerate.
Why is this so?
Is there some Ooniverse physics I need to research? OR Heaven forbid, a bug?
Other handwavium methods of explanation do exist - YMMV
Oolite Life is now revealed hereSelezen wrote:Apparently I was having a DaddyHoggy moment.
- aegidian
- Master and Commander
- Posts: 1161
- Joined: Thu May 20, 2004 10:46 pm
- Location: London UK
- Contact:
Re: Bug or Ooniverse physics I need to research?
What he said.galpet wrote:I can spend 46 hours in a hyperspace jump, but it's still not enough time for weapons to cool, or shields to regenerate.
You and your ship only spend a fraction of a second in a hyperspace jump. In the surrounding universe there is a significant time gap between your entry into hyperspace and your exit. It's a pseudo-relativistic effect that sees pilots long outliving planet dwellers.
- Disembodied
- Jedi Spam Assassin
- Posts: 6885
- Joined: Thu Jul 12, 2007 10:54 pm
- Location: Carter's Snort
Re: Bug or Ooniverse physics I need to research?
Alternatively (because from my own personal point of view, which is strictly for the necessities of my own fiction, wherein I need to have time for the characters to be bottled up in) travel through a wormhole does take time – it's just that this is elided in the game. However, when your ship is inside a wormhole it's effectively a little pocket universe, all to itself. As such, all the energy you take in with you, stays within your ship, because there's literally nowhere else for it to go. It's very important that the ship maintains the same energy gradients* coming out of the wormhole as it did going in – otherwise it might find itself being the seed for a very Big Bang indeed ...
The good news is, you're the Creator of a brand-new universe! The bad news is, you're less of a Creator, more of an accidental First Cause – the "oops" from whence sprang all things, if you will. And you don't get to survive the process.
*Fortunately, your ship can cope with energy gradients sufficient for life support – a value known colloquially as "Cook's Constant", supposedly being the amount required to make a really large pot of goat soup. Even so, many Captains will ensure that all meals are prepared well in advance of entering a wormhole, and some go so far as to restrict crew usage of hot water.
The good news is, you're the Creator of a brand-new universe! The bad news is, you're less of a Creator, more of an accidental First Cause – the "oops" from whence sprang all things, if you will. And you don't get to survive the process.
*Fortunately, your ship can cope with energy gradients sufficient for life support – a value known colloquially as "Cook's Constant", supposedly being the amount required to make a really large pot of goat soup. Even so, many Captains will ensure that all meals are prepared well in advance of entering a wormhole, and some go so far as to restrict crew usage of hot water.
Re: Bug or Ooniverse physics I need to research?
Obviously I slept through that lesson at school. Looks like I will have to do some more research at Lave University.another_commander wrote:From my perspective, a hyperspace jump lasts only a few seconds for the pilot, the seconds it takes to traverse the wormhole. When the ship emerges back to normal space, the ship clock has to be synchronized with universal time, because time inside the wormhole flows differently to the time outside of it. I'll leave the scientific explanation to the Relativistic / Temporal Physics lecturers at Lave University.
So, since only a few seconds have passed inside the wormhole, it makes sense that the lasers don't have enough time to cool down.
- Cody
- Sharp Shooter Spam Assassin
- Posts: 16081
- Joined: Sat Jul 04, 2009 9:31 pm
- Location: The Lizard's Claw
- Contact:
Re: Bug or Ooniverse physics I need to research?
What Disembodied said!
I would advise stilts for the quagmires, and camels for the snowy hills
And any survivors, their debts I will certainly pay. There's always a way!
And any survivors, their debts I will certainly pay. There's always a way!
- CommonSenseOTB
- ---- E L I T E ----
- Posts: 1397
- Joined: Wed May 04, 2011 10:42 am
- Location: Saskatchewan, Canada
Re: Bug or Ooniverse physics I need to research?
What he said!El Viejo wrote:What Disembodied said!
Actually what everyone else basically said. It's just commonsense to have a credible scientific explanation for hocus pocus(cave men would think a cup of coffee is hocus pocus ).
Think of space as a donut. Now take a bite. Now have some coffee.(Hocus pocus handwavium wallawalla washington saskatoon saskatchewan insert other words here)
What was I talking about?
Take an idea from one person and twist or modify it in a different way as a return suggestion so another person can see a part of it that can apply to the oxp they are working on.
CommonSense 'Outside-the-Box' Design Studios Ltd.
WIKI+OXPs
CommonSense 'Outside-the-Box' Design Studios Ltd.
WIKI+OXPs
Re: Bug or Ooniverse physics I need to research?
I side with the hyperspace is nearly instantaneous for the ship and its occupants.
Which means the rest of the universe ages while they don't.
46 hours may not sound like much, but for freighters which are only profitable if they keep jumping from system to system it can add up quickly. Fast loading/unloading of the standardized cargo pods means a ship needs only stay at a station for <20 minutes to be ready for the next jump. So to maximize profits, ships would spend most of their time jumping rather than in transit in-systems or docked at a station. For a ship's crew to have R&R, they could simply stay on a station till the ship comes back a few days later...while those on the ship see only a couple hours pass.
At its most extreme, Pythons built between 2700-2750 may still be running and in good repair in the year 3140 simply because from their point of view probably less than 100 years has passed.
The time "savings" from traveling at 50% the speed of light in a vacuum (even assuming that's 0.5 Light Mach) would be trivial by comparison.
Which means the rest of the universe ages while they don't.
46 hours may not sound like much, but for freighters which are only profitable if they keep jumping from system to system it can add up quickly. Fast loading/unloading of the standardized cargo pods means a ship needs only stay at a station for <20 minutes to be ready for the next jump. So to maximize profits, ships would spend most of their time jumping rather than in transit in-systems or docked at a station. For a ship's crew to have R&R, they could simply stay on a station till the ship comes back a few days later...while those on the ship see only a couple hours pass.
At its most extreme, Pythons built between 2700-2750 may still be running and in good repair in the year 3140 simply because from their point of view probably less than 100 years has passed.
The time "savings" from traveling at 50% the speed of light in a vacuum (even assuming that's 0.5 Light Mach) would be trivial by comparison.
Re: Bug or Ooniverse physics I need to research?
Which prompts another question.Switeck wrote:I side with the hyperspace is nearly instantaneous for the ship and its occupants.
Which means the rest of the universe ages while they don't.
46 hours may not sound like much, but for freighters which are only profitable if they keep jumping from system to system it can add up quickly. Fast loading/unloading of the standardized cargo pods means a ship needs only stay at a station for <20 minutes to be ready for the next jump. So to maximize profits, ships would spend most of their time jumping rather than in transit in-systems or docked at a station. For a ship's crew to have R&R, they could simply stay on a station till the ship comes back a few days later...while those on the ship see only a couple hours pass.
At its most extreme, Pythons built between 2700-2750 may still be running and in good repair in the year 3140 simply because from their point of view probably less than 100 years has passed.
The time "savings" from traveling at 50% the speed of light in a vacuum (even assuming that's 0.5 Light Mach) would be trivial by comparison.
How long have you been playing Oolite by the clock?
Jameson's clock starts at 2084004 days my clock reads 2084560 or 556 days.
Re: Bug or Ooniverse physics I need to research?
In one of my savegames I have, I just got a Boa 2 and the clock reads 2084035.
- DaddyHoggy
- Intergalactic Spam Assassin
- Posts: 8515
- Joined: Tue Dec 05, 2006 9:43 pm
- Location: Newbury, UK
- Contact:
Re: Bug or Ooniverse physics I need to research?
You bought a Boa 2 after just 31 days?Switeck wrote:In one of my savegames I have, I just got a Boa 2 and the clock reads 2084035.
Oolite Life is now revealed hereSelezen wrote:Apparently I was having a DaddyHoggy moment.
- Cody
- Sharp Shooter Spam Assassin
- Posts: 16081
- Joined: Sat Jul 04, 2009 9:31 pm
- Location: The Lizard's Claw
- Contact:
Re: Bug or Ooniverse physics I need to research?
My shipclock reads: 2086.433... and I still fly a Cobra MkIII.
I would advise stilts for the quagmires, and camels for the snowy hills
And any survivors, their debts I will certainly pay. There's always a way!
And any survivors, their debts I will certainly pay. There's always a way!
- drew
- ---- E L I T E ----
- Posts: 2190
- Joined: Fri May 19, 2006 9:29 am
- Location: In front of a laptop writing a book.
- Contact:
Re: Bug or Ooniverse physics I need to research?
Agreed, needed by my fiction as well. Too tempting a location to just allow it to last a few seconds. The Dark Wheel set a precident here which I plan on continuing. Weird stuff happens in the wormhole and it may take several minutes/hours to traverse.Disembodied wrote:Alternatively (because from my own personal point of view, which is strictly for the necessities of my own fiction, wherein I need to have time for the characters to be bottled up in) travel through a wormhole does take time – it's just that this is elided in the game.
Cheers,
Drew.