Quote
Originally posted by Commander Arashi:
**If you want your people to be able to jump into a ship and zip over to another star as easily as taking I-50 up to Tahoe, all you can do is give them a black box that "makes the ship go fast." The creative part is making an interesting special effect to go with it. I have a certain fondness for the hand-wound coils of Williamson's "Geodesics" but cracked dilithium crystals have a charm as well. Not to mention, say, the glowing pile of sticks that is the Sheewash drive, or the creeping Blind Spot, or the morning-after suffered by the Pride of Chanur with every jump, or even the relativistic nighmares of the Forever War (a facinating concept for a plug, by the way). Or the mad simplicity of the Bergenholm, where the ship without inertia simply goes whatever speed the thrusters will take it, and C is no more remarkable then any other number.
Or the bloater drive. The ship gets very, very, very large; large until planets are tiny specks next to it and the stars a few miles apart. Then it trundles up to the proper star on maneuvering thrusters, turns off the bloater drive and comes back to normal size and space-time. Harry Harrison, by the way; "Bill, the Galactic Hero."
**
Kull wahad! I am profoundly stirred! You are obviously well-read in SF, and an amateur theoretical physicist at that! From E.E. Smith's Lensman series to Larry Niven's Ringworld , you truly know your stuff. And you mentioned the Heechee, to boot. Wow.
Okay, rant over. Sorry, folks, it's just that I recognized and remembered 90% of the stuff that he mentioned, and I didn't even know I remembered it.
One of my personal favorites is the spacefolding drive, as it has been previously explained. However, Hyperspace has its merits -- and some serious limitations. I recommend Asimov's I, Robot , for a decent description of that, and his Foundation and Earth for gravitic and inertialless ships.
When dealing with Hyperspace as it is understood now, you have to remember that we exist in a 4-dimensional continuum. That is, 3 spatial dimensions and 1 temporal dimension. Hyperspace assumes that there is at least one more spatial dimension. Most theories include five to seven extra spatial dimensions, and some call for eleven or more. These extra dimensions are supposed to be wrapped up into a ball with a diameter of the Planck Length, which, if I remember correctly, is 10^-32 cm: really really really really really really REALLY REALLY small. This ball is in physical contact with EVERY POINT on the conventional 4D spacetime continuum. Kinda weird, huh? Now, a Hyperspatial Drive would cause the ship to travel through these extra dimensions, and pop out whereever it was told to.
Of course, one begins to wonder what would happen if it was not space that possessed the extra dimensions, but time... What a difference two more could make...
Good luck, and God bless,
-- spacecowboy
------------------
Suddenly, the little scoutship disappeared and then reappeared right behind the alien warfleet. The gravitic ship's captain hailed the armada. "You are going to be destroyed, but I will give you a choice as to how you want to spend eternity: big pieces, little pieces, or quarks?"
Dead silence.
"Quarks it is, then."