Hi Dennis,
I'm not talking about the time dilation factor when traveling at 20 percent
the speed of light, in the story they had a separate chemical way of slowing
a person's senses and metabolism to 365th of normal,
The spacecraft was cooled down and they had to walk by sliding their feet
on the floor.
Phil
----- Original Message -----
From: "Dennis Towne" <[email protected]>
To: "Gamers Discussion list" <[email protected]>
Sent: Monday, August 13, 2012 1:57 PM
Subject: Re: [Audyssey] FTL in games
Phil,
At 20% of the speed of light in our current universe, the time
dilation factor is only around 2%, assuming I've done my math
correctly. In other words, time would only run about 2% slower, so
for every hour that passes on earth, only about 59 minutes would pass
on the ship.
Also, the time dilation factor affects everything on the ship,
including the robots. They wouldn't seem to move any faster than
usual to the people on the ship.
It sounds like whoever wrote the story didn't quite understand GR, or
they might have just thrown accuracy to the wind for the sake of plot.
At any rate, I think calling it 'science fact' is a little too
generous.
Dennis Towne
Alter Aeon MUD
http://www.alteraeon.com
On Mon, Aug 13, 2012 at 1:38 PM, Phil Vlasak <[email protected]> wrote:
Hi Thomas,
I should have called it fake FTI.
In the story the craft traveled at twenty percent the speed of light so
it
was science fact, but as the people's senses and metabolism were slowed
down
to 365th of normal, it seemed like faster than light to them.
Traveling at 37,000 miles per second would get you quite far in 100
years.
If you traveled to the nearest star at 20% the speed of light (60,000
kps)
it would take about 22 years
To the slowed down people on board,it would seem like 22 days.
They could also use a form of teleporter.
He could press a button on his wrist and say cabin 16, and instantly, to
him, he would be there.
In reality he would be picked up by a robot and moved at 3 miles per
hour,
which with his slowed down senses would feel like 1,000 miles per hour.
Phil
----- Original Message ----- From: "Thomas Ward"
<[email protected]>
To: "Gamers Discussion list" <[email protected]>
Sent: Monday, August 13, 2012 12:57 PM
Subject: Re: [Audyssey] FTL in games
Hi Phil,
True, but FTL is as yet in opposition with known physics. As I
understand it nothing can travel faster than the speed of light. It is
the great constant in physics. There are tacions that move faster than
light, but nothing else in known physics can do it.
The other problem that makes FTL implausible is inertia. How exactly
do you go from 0 KPS to 300,000 KPS without the people inside the
spaceship being smashed into jelly?
My point being while FTL is common place in books, movies, and video
games no one has a clue how to get around the laws of physics and make
it truly plausible. That's why it is called science fiction. :D
On 8/13/12, Phil Vlasak <[email protected]> wrote:
Hi Dark,
There have been many SF stories where faster than light transport was
scientifically possible.
In Aliens and 2001 , they use hibernation.
I read of a story with modified hibernation where the humans slow down
so
a
year feels like a day of time, and a 100 year flight would feel like
100
days.
Of course, when they got back to earth, over 200 years would have
passed.
One interesting detail was that the robots moved at normal speed, which
was
so fast to the humans that they were invisible.
A human would ask for a glass of water, hold out her hand and it would
almost magically appear in her hand.
Phil
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