So, I guess my answer to the question "Do you know any of these effects?" is Yes.
Gap Quiz
Moderators: Cord Hurn, Cagliostro
- IrrationalSanity
- The Gap Into Spam
- Posts: 1664
- Joined: Fri Oct 15, 2004 10:02 pm
- Location: Someplace birds sing
- Has thanked: 12 times
- Been thanked: 6 times
- Contact:
- StevieG
- Andelanian
- Posts: 7199
- Joined: Wed Dec 12, 2007 10:47 pm
- Location: Australia
- Has thanked: 24 times
- Been thanked: 26 times
Loss of ship rotational ability is not correct. Sorry CH!
Gap sickness, although correct, is not correct either
in the context of the text and yeah, not the subtle effect that this answer requires.
First clue - it relates to human perception of real space...
Gap sickness, although correct, is not correct either

First clue - it relates to human perception of real space...
Hugs and sh!t ~ lucimay
I think you're right ~ TheFallen

I think you're right ~ TheFallen

- StevieG
- Andelanian
- Posts: 7199
- Joined: Wed Dec 12, 2007 10:47 pm
- Location: Australia
- Has thanked: 24 times
- Been thanked: 26 times
So, why was piracy such a problem? That's the last clue before I give the answer - otherwise this thread will be dead foreverHowever, some of the gap drive's effects were more subtle. For example, it produced an insidious distortion in the perception of real space. The ability to travel imponderable distances almost instantly created the pervasive illusion that those distances were indeed effectively small.
...
In real time, effective time, the light-years crossed by the gap drive didn't exist. A ship with a gap drive didn't travel those light-years: it bypassed them through dimensional translocation. But when the crossing was done, the ship returned to normal space - and normal space was so vast that its scale was not truly conceivable.
...
In other words, the discovery of the Juanita Estevez Mass Transmission Field Generator had a transforming effect on humankind's relationship with vast distances - and no effect at all on humankind's place in normal space.
The dilemma of piracy was a case in point.
Why was piracy such a virulent problem? How had it attained such power in human space? Ships could cross the gap in a matter of instants. If a pirate raided, say, Terminus, the information could be transmitted to Earth by gap courier drone, and within hours UMCPHQ could send out a cruiser to support the station. How could any illegal flourish under these conditions?

Hugs and sh!t ~ lucimay
I think you're right ~ TheFallen

I think you're right ~ TheFallen

- StevieG
- Andelanian
- Posts: 7199
- Joined: Wed Dec 12, 2007 10:47 pm
- Location: Australia
- Has thanked: 24 times
- Been thanked: 26 times

Hooray for Cord Hurn!!
Phew! Over to you CHQuite simply, piracy flourished because it took place in normal space. Like the UMCP, illegals often had gap ships. Nevertheless their every action took place in normal space. Gap ships could change the sector of space in which they acted with incredible ease; but the actions themselves still consumed real time and involved real distances. A UMCP cruiser might well chase the pirate vessel across the entire galaxy - and yet every effort the cruiser made to give battle occurred in normal space, where simply hunting through a solar system for telltale emissions was a job that might take months.
These hindrances were vastly increased by the fact that gap travel itself was not as precise as it appeared on paper. Both course and distance for any crossing were susceptible to several forms of inaccuracy. Minuscule fractions of a degree in course became hundreds of thousands of kilometres when those fractions were multiplied by light-years. And the calibration of distance was even more complex. The distance a ship travelled through the gap varied according to a number of factors, including speed, rate of acceleration, and the ratio between her mass and both the actual and potential power of her gap drive.
In addition the interaction of those elements was ruled by the gap drive's hysteresis transducer, which controlled the extent to which the drive's effect lagged behind its cause: too much lag, and the ship never went into tach; too little, and the ship never resumed tard. As a result, tiny fluctuations in power or hysteresis, or minute miscalculations of mass, became large shortfalls or overshots. Superhuman precision was required to make any ship resume tard right where her captain intended when he went into tach.
...
Here again the sheer scale of space subtly undermined humankind's apparent mastery of inconceivable distances. Being a pirate was easier - and fighting piracy was harder - than most people understood.

Hugs and sh!t ~ lucimay
I think you're right ~ TheFallen

I think you're right ~ TheFallen

- StevieG
- Andelanian
- Posts: 7199
- Joined: Wed Dec 12, 2007 10:47 pm
- Location: Australia
- Has thanked: 24 times
- Been thanked: 26 times
Yikes! Thanks CH 
I'll give an easier one this time:
When the Bill refused to give Davies to Nick and also didn't honour his credit, what did Nick offer to trade? When the Bill declined this offer, what was Nick going to offer before he was interrupted?

I'll give an easier one this time:
When the Bill refused to give Davies to Nick and also didn't honour his credit, what did Nick offer to trade? When the Bill declined this offer, what was Nick going to offer before he was interrupted?
Hugs and sh!t ~ lucimay
I think you're right ~ TheFallen

I think you're right ~ TheFallen
