FSD puts you relative to them - your and their shared instance travels at 0.1c, but you move under 500 m/s relative to them.Yes, but when you enter normal space they are still traveling at 0.1c and you are not.
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FSD puts you relative to them - your and their shared instance travels at 0.1c, but you move under 500 m/s relative to them.Yes, but when you enter normal space they are still traveling at 0.1c and you are not.
For 100,000s of years, the Generation ship had been traveling through the galaxy. Generations upon generations had lived, died, and warred on her. Earth, their supposed origin - was now more myth than reality. However, Captain Palmer felt he was nearing something. His hand quivered over the green TRANSMIT button. He couldn't believe they had got this far... the log data chronicled all the strifes and troubles that had befallen the vessel since THE LAUNCH. The log was not even required reading anymore as it would take many lifetimes to get through. A fastidious group of men called The Keepers had extracted choice works from the Log and fashioned it in to an easier-to-read 3000 page tome, they called the Bible. Captain Palmer didn't know if it mentioned this particular destination.
Sweat brimming on his brow, he pressed the button. "This is the good-ship Descartes, a generation ship from Earth. We picked up a signal here. Over."
There was a crackle over the waves... and a reply was heard.
"This is Hutton Orbital. Would ye be wanting some mugs?"
I had a buddy who pitched "Lord of the Flies - in Space"
A huge cryo ship en route to Alpha Centari has a meteor / catastrophic systems failure and all the parents cryo tubes fail and the kids get decanted into a huge broken spaceship - instead of a desert island.
All the Lord of the Flies stuff happens - the dead pilot hanging by his parachute in a tree being the captain in low conciousness cryo like in Dark Star. Final sequence where the kids chase down to the beach to kill, happens during automated re-entry. Fire and explosions etc. and instead of a boat and civilization on the beach, at landing they've been overtaken for a hundred years by better faster ships.
I Wonder who holds film rights to Lord of the Flies?
Would be a cool reboot.
FSD puts you relative to them - your and their shared instance travels at 0.1c, but you move under 500 m/s relative to them.
Huh, this indeed opens an interesting question: what exactly is the FDS relativistic reference frame at re-entry?
You travel relative to the instance. In the nav panel (left, first tab) the blue triangle indicates the body your speed is relative to.
Stations orbit planets at thousands of m/s, planets orbit stars etc, but when you drop into the stations instance it doesn't zoom off, you travel relative to it.
At relativistic speeds the same applies, with the caveat of time dilation compared to the rest of the universe. In Elight speed is modelled as infinite for simplicity, so the time dilation doesn't actually apply, but the rest does
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Umm... 0.6 * 1000 is a bit more than 72, right? Even if the acceleration phase took a year or two...Thanks Drew!!
According to your facts (start 2097 - now 3302 [I skipped ahead to next year.] and a speed of 0.6c) the generation ships should be 72.25 ly away from Sol. That's really not very far.
1c = 299792458 m/s
0.6c = 179875474.8 m/s
1ly = 9.4607304725808E+015 m
=> you travel ~16.678 years for 1 ly
=> in 1205 years you travel ~72.25 ly
even less if you consider a lenghty accelleration
LOLWUT?1c = 299792458 m/s
0.6c = 179875474.8 m/s
1ly = 9.4607304725808E+015 m
=> you travel ~16.678 years for 1 ly
For 100,000s of years, the Generation ship had been traveling through the galaxy. Generations upon generations had lived, died, and warred on her. Earth, their supposed origin - was now more myth than reality. However, Captain Palmer felt he was nearing something. His hand quivered over the green TRANSMIT button. He couldn't believe they had got this far... the log data chronicled all the strifes and troubles that had befallen the vessel since THE LAUNCH. The log was not even required reading anymore as it would take many lifetimes to get through. A fastidious group of men called The Keepers had extracted choice works from the Log and fashioned it in to an easier-to-read 3000 page tome, they called the Bible. Captain Palmer didn't know if it mentioned this particular destination.
Sweat brimming on his brow, he pressed the button. "This is the good-ship Descartes, a generation ship from Earth. We picked up a signal here. Over."
There was a crackle over the waves... and a reply was heard.
"This is Hutton Orbital. Would ye be wanting some mugs?"
Suddenly the gameplay possibilities begin to look interesting.the ring is 420ly to 722 ly
Ok so the reference frame is either the nearest body or the main star, this makes sense. Now we have a practical problem - if we drop into normal space at relativistic speed, in what is now our reference we will see the rest of the system whizzing around us at relativistic speed. That would be hard to model, so I suspect we either wil not be able to do that or will only encounter those ships at the end of their braking.
And if you consider that generation ships were no longer sent out since 2500, they should be in a ring between 480 and 722 lightyears around Sol.
You've got a point there.The reason why my outlook is not very rosy is because of the speed that these ships were/are traveling. If you played extensively the two prequels to ED you'd know the strife that was trying to fly a starship in Newtonian ways and these behemoths are traveling upwards of .6C? How would you ever catch them?