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03-10-2023, 03:19 PM
(This post was last modified: 03-10-2023, 03:25 PM by Drashner1.)
(03-10-2023, 02:28 PM)ExabyteMiner256 Wrote: If I understand this correctly, the tidal forces are trying to pull things in/near the WH apart from each other. This causes super long ships to experience all that tidal force along the axis of too-long-ness summed up, and something breaks. However, once every (broken-off) segment is shorter than the max length, they can handle the stress. So in your example of the ship with a 2km cable on it, the parts that break wouldn't necessarily be the parts at the ends--it could happen anywhere, though it would be more likely to break wherever doing so would require the least energy (i.e. at weak points).
Because the little piled-up ships in my example aren't tied together or anything, the tidal forces would just make them all fall away from each other, and nothing would need to break because no single object is longer than the max length. What's your reasoning for multiple ships going through together acting like the same ship?
Also, thanks for clarifying that "radius vs. diameter" mix up. (By the way, what does "IIRC" mean?)
To do the easy part first - IIRC = If I Recall Correctly
Re the tidal forces - No, I'm afraid that's not correct. You seem to be thinking of the tidal forces as running uniformly through the wormhole and that's not what's happening. While there is a certain amount of extra tidal force running through the wormhole, the effect I'm describing is one of extremely strong forces concentrated in a specific region (a spherical shell) that increases in strength and appears to move inward toward a ship from all directions as it transits the wormhole. At the Throat of the wormhole, this spherical region achieves its maximal force and smallest size. If the ship is larger in any dimension than the smallest size of the Throat, the part extending beyond the Throat will experience massive tidal forces and be ripped part.
However, if the ship is smaller than that smallest size in all dimensions it will only experience the lower level of tidal forces and not be harmed during its transit of the wormhole.
If the wormhole Throat is only 2 km across and the ship is only 1.5 km long, then no part of it will fall within the zone of extreme tidal stress and it will simply transit through without issue. However, if the ship is 3km long, then the front and rear 500m of its structure will both be subject to massive tidal forces and be ripped apart (which seems likely to void the warranty for the rest of the ship as well.
Think of it (to use a not wholly accurate, but hopefully easy to visualize) like the eye of a hurricane. If you're in the eye, it's a beautiful sunny day - if you're outside the eye, things are much less pleasant. Now imagine you have a really long train of railway cars that is long enough that part of it extends beyond the eye into the body of the hurricane. The part in the storm is not going to find things as nice as the part inside the eye.
Getting back to your ship - it doesn't matter so much that the ship is long and thin or that the fragments are smaller - the tidal forces around the Throat are so intense they will shred matter regardless of the ship's size. The part of the ship extending beyond the Throat's minimum size will definitely break into many small pieces - whether other parts do may depend on its design. A clump of ships that is larger than the Throat min size will size the outermost ships experiencing massive tidal forces and being shredded, although if in the process they are thrown far enough away, I suppose they might experience the 'no one runs into each other effect'. Maybe.
Todd
EDIT - Just to clarify - if a spherical ship (or a cube or a pyramid or whatever) that is larger than the minimum Throat size tries to enter the WH it will get torn to pieces by the tidal forces just as readily. Being long and thin has nothing to do with it. Being larger than the minimum Throat diameter will result in the larger part experiencing the massive tidal forces even as the rest of the ship doesn't.
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(03-10-2023, 03:19 PM)Drashner1 Wrote: You seem to be thinking of the tidal forces as running uniformly through the wormhole and that's not what's happening. While there is a certain amount of extra tidal force running through the wormhole, the effect I'm describing is one of extremely strong forces concentrated in a specific region (a spherical shell) that increases in strength and appears to move inward toward a ship from all directions as it transits the wormhole. At the Throat of the wormhole, this spherical region achieves its maximal force and smallest size. If the ship is larger in any dimension than the smallest size of the Throat, the part extending beyond the Throat will experience massive tidal forces and be ripped part.
However, if the ship is smaller than that smallest size in all dimensions it will only experience the lower level of tidal forces and not be harmed during its transit of the wormhole.
If the wormhole Throat is only 2 km across and the ship is only 1.5 km long, then no part of it will fall within the zone of extreme tidal stress and it will simply transit through without issue. However, if the ship is 3km long, then the front and rear 500m of its structure will both be subject to massive tidal forces and be ripped apart (which seems likely to void the warranty for the rest of the ship as well.
Think of it (to use a not wholly accurate, but hopefully easy to visualize) like the eye of a hurricane. If you're in the eye, it's a beautiful sunny day - if you're outside the eye, things are much less pleasant. Now imagine you have a really long train of railway cars that is long enough that part of it extends beyond the eye into the body of the hurricane. The part in the storm is not going to find things as nice as the part inside the eye.
I don't get this. Of course the tidal forces aren't spread evenly through the WH, but what does the center of the ship have to do with their distribution? To a piece of the ship on the edge of the ship, the "bubble"/"eye wall" of highest force should be centered around it and not the center of the ship. If you're sure that it has to be centered on the middle of the ship, why is it centered there? (To use your hurricane analogy, why does the hurricane follow the train?) And why do the tidal forces seem to suddenly jump up from "not much" to "molecular dissociation" at the edge of the "bubble"? I had thought that the "bubble" you're talking about is actually the point where the accumulated tidal stress over the whole ship up to that point gets to be too much for the stuff in between, and that stuff breaks away. I see no reason for it to disintegrate once it's detached. Sure, the ship is going to fragment, but what's so special about the center of the ship for your tidal "eye wall" to be centered around it specifically???
I am so confused!
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03-11-2023, 12:00 AM
(This post was last modified: 03-11-2023, 12:01 AM by Drashner1.)
(03-10-2023, 04:33 PM)ExabyteMiner256 Wrote: I don't get this. Of course the tidal forces aren't spread evenly through the WH, but what does the center of the ship have to do with their distribution? To a piece of the ship on the edge of the ship, the "bubble"/"eye wall" of highest force should be centered around it and not the center of the ship. If you're sure that it has to be centered on the middle of the ship, why is it centered there? (To use your hurricane analogy, why does the hurricane follow the train?) And why do the tidal forces seem to suddenly jump up from "not much" to "molecular dissociation" at the edge of the "bubble"? I had thought that the "bubble" you're talking about is actually the point where the accumulated tidal stress over the whole ship up to that point gets to be too much for the stuff in between, and that stuff breaks away. I see no reason for it to disintegrate once it's detached. Sure, the ship is going to fragment, but what's so special about the center of the ship for your tidal "eye wall" to be centered around it specifically???
I am so confused!
Ok, let's back up a bit and try a different approach here.
Firstly - just to clear up this point - it's not the center of the ship that's important, it's the center of the wormhole. And the tidal forces involved don't operate the same way they would around something like a planet or black hole. The wormhole is actually an example of 'space-time engineering' - space-time has been altered during the creation/expansion of the wormhole to operate in what we might deem an 'unnatural' or 'artificial' manner.
However, to get back to that different approach, let's consider that graphic that you posted earlier in the discussion:
As previously discussed, this is not a literal image of a wormhole, but a simplified 2d representation of a much more complex 3d state of affairs. But it does help with visualization and may be useful here. You could also perhaps visualize this as two actual cones (maybe giant versions of the bright orange ones used in roadwork in the US?) connected at their tips - but whatever works best for you is fine. Anyway...
Imagine this diagram as representing an OA wormhole - The widest part of each conical shape represents the 'edge' of the wormhole that you see when approaching it from 'normal' space. The narrowest part represents the Throat. The grid lines represent the tidal forces present in the wormhole. At the widest part/edge of the wormhole they are spread out and diffuse, but as you move into it they become more and more concentrated and more and more powerful. But they are all (in terms of what we need to worry about) contained within the grid lines or the walls of the cones - the interior of the wormhole as defined by the gridlines is free of lines/free of tidal forces. You do NOT want to touch those lines/the walls of the cones.
Based on our previous discussion, let's say the narrowest part of the Throat is 2km across.
What happens if a spaceship (let's have it be a circle in the diagram or a sphere in our imaginary double road cone thing) that is 4km in diameter tries to pass thru the wormhole?
I'll pause here to give you time to respond.
Hope this helps,
Todd
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You know what, I'm going to call this a stalemate. We're clearly getting nowhere, and I think we should just drop the issue. Agreed?
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(04-08-2023, 12:25 PM)ExabyteMiner256 Wrote: You know what, I'm going to call this a stalemate. We're clearly getting nowhere, and I think we should just drop the issue. Agreed?
This comes across as unnecessarily hostile. It’s not like there was an argument happening, Todd was politely responding to your questions.
In any case, on the previous pages you indicated improvements to the descriptions of DNI “hacking”. Are you planning on posting that draft soon?
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04-23-2023, 02:51 PM
(This post was last modified: 04-23-2023, 02:52 PM by ExabyteMiner256.)
1. Sorry! I really didn't mean to sound hostile.
2. I mostly forgot about the DNI hacking topic. (T_T)
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