I came to think about distances in E.D again - this time not about distances in space, but rather about distances of places on planets (or in planetary orbit).
From what I understand, the speed of a ship is shown in metres per second. A ship flying at a speed of 200m/s is travelling at 720km/h. At this speed travelling from Berlin to New York (ca 6400 km) would take me a bit less than 9 hours. Seems quite long compared to the time I need to travel light-years in space...
Did I make a mistake with the current flight-speeds? Are we supposed to use SC inside a planets athmosphere? How large is the distance, that the mass-locking effect of an earthlike planet will extend into space? (Just as a reference: todays geostationary objects orbit in 36.000 km height)
Is there any info on how these close (yet still immense) distances will be covered?
From what I understand, the speed of a ship is shown in metres per second. A ship flying at a speed of 200m/s is travelling at 720km/h. At this speed travelling from Berlin to New York (ca 6400 km) would take me a bit less than 9 hours. Seems quite long compared to the time I need to travel light-years in space...
Did I make a mistake with the current flight-speeds? Are we supposed to use SC inside a planets athmosphere? How large is the distance, that the mass-locking effect of an earthlike planet will extend into space? (Just as a reference: todays geostationary objects orbit in 36.000 km height)
Is there any info on how these close (yet still immense) distances will be covered?