Halo Science - Ringworlds and Plasma Weapons 111
The book Halo Effect is an intriguing title that takes a look Bungie's best-selling Halo titles from a number of different angles. Each chapter includes coverage of specific elements; included are descriptions of pro events, a bit on the development process, and the making of the Red vs. Blue series. One of the most interesting chapters takes a look at the science behind the Halo world, talking about the physics and logic behind ringworlds and the hi-tech weaponry seen in the game. Thanks in part to a mini-review of the book on the GameSetWatch site, Gamasutra has been allowed to reprint the entire 'science of Halo' chapter on their website. "A 5,000 kilometer radius would yield a circumference of roughly 31,400 kilometers. If we assume a width-to-radius ratio similar to that of Niven's Ringworld, they would be approximately 5.37 kilometers wide. They are significantly wider, though, at 320 kilometers. The Halos, then, would have a surface area of 10 million square kilometers - slightly larger than the surface area of Canada, and approximately 2 percent of the surface area of Earth. Of course, since we know that there are lakes, seas, and rivers on the Halos, the livable surface area would be fractionally less." Update: 05/02 18:30 GMT by Z : The initial version of the article posted was from pre-production and contained some errors. They've been fixed in the article and now here in the post as well.
decimal point (Score:3, Informative)
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Niven's Ringworld is one million miles across the ribbon, the rim walls holding in the atmosphere are 1000 miles high, and its circumference is 600 million miles around. For those who use a more sensible and thus cowardly* base 10 measurement system: 1,609,344 km wide, rim walls 1,609 km high, and 965,606,400 km in circumference. That yields a radius (AU) of 153,681,031 km. The radius/width ratio is thus about 154:1, so your instincts are correct, even if the calculation is a bit off.
Added bonus: the surface area works out to 1.6×10^15 sq.km--about 3 million Earths; wrap your head around that! Halo's 10,000 km diameter is relatively tiny.
(* Profuse apologies: impugning the valour of anything French, including metrics, on american-run sites is, seemingly, de rigueur.)
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Actually, it's more directed towards anything uniquely, or at least characteristically French. Since the metric system is much more widely used than in just France. So, Metric gets a pass on being classified as one of those "French things" to be mocked. No, we mock the metric system as one of those "European things", which operates on a different scale altogether - fewer
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Mod Parent Up, Please (Score:2)
2) The signature is great, too. Well done. I have no mod points today or I'd give you one. The only question would be for funny or underrated. Watch - now I'll have them for the next four days running.
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Actually, it's more directed towards anything uniquely, or at least characteristically French. Since the metric system is much more widely used than in just France. So, Metric gets a pass on being classified as one of those "French things" to be mocked. No, we mock the metric system as one of those "European things", which operates on a different scale altogether - fewer cheese-eating surrender-monkey references, for one.
Ah well, wit is wasted on the young, and America chooses to be perennially young. I was referring, of course, to the origins [colostate.edu] of the metric system.
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Actually, I was quite aware of it. In fact, I was also considering the use of the French language as another example akin to the metric system (really, it isn't the language that gets mocked, but rather the particular dialect one finds in France). I was all set to go on about how the French Canadians and the Cajuns down south both get mocked for their language
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You know when making Francophile arguments to les neocons internets it's de rigueur to describe American culture as jejeune. The English phrase "perennially young" lacks a certain je ne sais quois.
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Re:Ringtube?!? (Score:4, Funny)
The correct term is Tubeworld. Despite the environmental problems you point out, this is clearly superior to aringworld, since it would be its own internet.
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Talk about a fat pipe...
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That would be a fucking thick tube.
The whole thing has a radius of about 5000km.
Maybe Ted Stevens was right?
Re:decimal point (Score:4, Informative)
A ring 93 million miles in radius (on earth obit)
600 million miles long
One million miles wide
thickness of of about 1000 meters
walls on the edge 1000 miles high
Rotation on axis 770 miles per second
But I'm sure those or just generalities
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That doesn't even make sense.
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In fact the linear speed when on the actual axis would be 0 miles per second.
I assume 770 miles/sec is the linear speed when on the ring 93 million miles away from the axis.
I am eager to be corrected on this though.
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Indeed. That, and a radius of 5000kms from our Sun would put you squarely in an area of space you wouldn't want to spend much time in.
The ringworld in Niven's book was utterly huge.
Cheers
Re:decimal point (Score:4, Funny)
Newark?
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Well, I've only ever been in the airport, but I think you're probably correct from what I saw.
Cheers
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Bad Calculations (Score:5, Informative)
Go to the original (Score:2, Informative)
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If you read the novels, they also shove in a bun
Re:Go to the original (Score:4, Insightful)
GP is a tool, make no mistake. The Halo books are solid sci-fi in their own right.
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And the dual auto-reloading sawed off shotguns in Marathon 2 have got to be the most kick-ass weapons I've ever played with. They had a great rhythm to them while also having the ability to shred armies of enemies if you got them in a hallway.
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but... (Score:3, Funny)
maybe the pale folk would finally see some sun
Sorry Niven; (Score:3, Informative)
Sorry I just couldn't resist.
Ringworld is simply a must-read for anybody who considers themselves a geek. Thank God it won't ever be made into a movie.
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"Based on Larry Niven's RINGWORLD series of novels, a four-hour mini-series is in development. In the future four explorers crash on an artificial structure in deep space, a mammoth ring that circles a distant star."
I've been waiting for years- I guess we'll see if it ever comes to fruition.
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Date: Tuesday, April 6, 2004
So, they obviously are taking their time about it...
Iain Banks Orbitals (Score:2)
I haven't played Halo, but from what I've seen on the net I suspect the GCU Grey Area might be poking around there some time...
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You quite sure it's a future you'd be happy living in? Have you read State of the Art?
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I'll freely admit I'd certainly prefer being part of the Culture or the Ulterior - but within those parts I could be quite content
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Ah, you haven't read The State of the Art then.
The Culture novels are not set in the future.
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Yeh, bastards... why the hell did they have to pick us as the control? It's the opposite of the anthropic principle, anyone would think it was a cosmic plot device to explain why we haven't been...
Oh, yeh...
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Someone has put together a nice list of similarities between the games and the books.
http://marathon.bungie.org/story/halo_culture.html [bungie.org]
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The Halo ships seem a bit boring compared to the Culture ones, though.
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Ringworlds have a lot of problems (Score:5, Informative)
Dyson Spheres actually make a lot more sense than Ringworlds. Any civilization capable of making a Ringworld would most likely be able to make a Dyson Sphere.
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Probably the answer is to abandon a solid surface, but that works as well for a ring as a sphere.
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Re:Ringworlds have a lot of problems (Score:4, Interesting)
Note that as you don't spin a Dyson Sphere, net gravity is very low. About half that of the Sun's from the distance of the Earth. This makes ponds, lakes & seas possible (if not probable, and probably temporary), but quite dangerous. Rivers, however, are not going to occur.
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You could stabilize it with a large number of low yeild thrusters placed on the outside of the sphere, keeping the sun at the center without needing to have any physical contact with it. These thrusters could also be used to spin the sphere, causing a centrifugal force that pushes outward from the sun, needing no cealing whatsoever (assuming you were at least earth's distance from the sun away, at all points), because things would fall away from the central gravity of
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Re:Ringworlds have a lot of problems (Score:5, Interesting)
It seems it would be good to build a smaller sphere that can collect this energy. If you built it at an inner orbit (like Mercury's orbital distance) you wouldn't need as much material. You would leave out a section of the middle that corresponds to the location of the 'ring plane' to allow the energy there to make its way to the ring. Both halves of the sphere could still be connected, but instead of solid sphere, it would be alternating solid/empty to provide the function of the shadow squares. You may want to perforate it in other areas as well to allow solar pressure to escape.
Exactly what materials you'd use, I don't know
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The *sphere* would be at a much closer distance to the sun so that you wouldn't need as much material to construct it. Its only purpose would be to collect energy. You would just leave the center with 'cutout' sections to allow energy to continue to travel out to the ring at its further distance.
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As for the poles, wouldn't it be better to keep those covered so that you can harness the solar power (rather than using them for habitats)? After all, the definition of a type II civilization is that they're able to use the entire power output of a star. You can't do that if you let most of the solar radiation escape.
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Couldn't you just add mass to the shell to increase gravity?
Oddly enough, no. :-)
Extra mass farther away from you than the center of gravity doesn't count-- if you dug a very deep tunnel towards the center of the earth, you'd find yourself weighing less the deeper you got.
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That doesn't sound right to me at all.
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The trick is that the gravity of the mass under your feet is exactly counterbalanced by the gravity of the rest of the shell, the majority of which is above you. It's farther away, true, but the fact is there's so much more of it balances out the equation.
Now on the outside of the shell, gravity would work in a more expected fashion.
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If a civilization can create a 1AU-diameter ring around a star, finding enough material to make it that thick doesn't seem like a big challenge. Maybe this is a good reason for a ringworld instead of a Dyson sphere: it wouldn't require quite as much material.
Of course, a civilization that advanced could probably just make artificial gravity generators.
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If it's possible. It may not. It's a huge object requiring a lot of fantastic technologies. But a shell less then earth thick and earth density of the earth would result in lower gravity. If it had a great deal more dendity it may need less overall mass. For instance if they had some way to use stable degenerate matter they wouldn't have to have it the thickness of earth and less mass as well.
Re:Ringworlds have a lot of problems (Score:4, Interesting)
If you spin a dyson sphere, you dont have to simulate gravity, at all, and if the spinning mechanism failed, you would have a LOT of time to deal with it, as it would take a while for something spinning that fast to spin down to a point where people start falling off the surface. Assuming the loss of spin comes from too few functioning thrusters, then you would have an even slower spin-down because the tursters would compensate for the loss, at least a little.
Portals are a staple of most dyson spheres, but with something that big, the odds of having to leave very often are rather unlikely. Even if you did need to leave, reinforced circular portals would be good,it wouldnt compromise the strength of the sphere if it was curved at the same rate, and could be built as needed. Any single LARGE (drive a planet through it) portal could be difficult, but would not be impossible.
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But remember that in that case, the "gravity" is always perpendicular to the axis of the spin, so only people on the equator get gravity that is "down".
This results in only a single (relatively) thin strip at the equator being habitable, because all the air is down there. Then you wonder why you're building the rest of the sphere. Then you end up making just the ring, and making it stronger. And you're back to Ringworld. (Plus the Ring doesn't hav
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I say 80%, because even when your 9/10ths down the side of a spinning sphere, theres still enough centrifugal force to keep something there instead of falling inwards, the gravity might be 1/10th of earth normal, but thats liveable.
If you spun the equater
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you could, I suppose, build a "stepped sphere" ( like the hats in Devo's "Whip It" http://www.vh1.com/artists/az/devo/videos.jhtml/ [vh1.com] ), which is essentially a set of cylinders decreasing in radius from the equator to the poles, to solve the gravity problem. this results in the stellar light always arriving at the same ap
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This results in only a single (relatively) thin strip at the equator being habitable, because all the air is down there. Then you wonder why you're building the rest of the sphere.
Energy collection. With ring worlds, you only get a small chunk of the sphere.
If a dyson sphere turns out to be an extra-wide ringworld, you can simply equip the uninhabitable terrain with solar panels to collect power. This clears up some space on the ringworld which can be used for other things. In addition, assuming that no energy is lost in transmission from the poles to the equator, you'd have much more power collected than simply using the ring itself.
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--sabre86
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If you have gravity enough to hold water in place - then you'll have water seeking it's own level, I.E. rivers.
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Think of it as a super-high-tech Space Station and you'll be close to correc
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I think the answer is to forget the idea of having a star in the middle, which enables you to build substantially smaller. The ringw
What about the edges? (Score:4, Interesting)
Walls (Score:3, Informative)
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http://games.monstersatplay.com/assets/screenshots
http://games.monstersatplay.com/assets/screenshots
http://games.monstersatplay.com/assets/screenshots
http://games.monstersatplay.com/assets/screenshots
It sure looks like there are walls in these pictures. Don't forget that Halo is 53 kilometers across, so fair
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[ * ]
With the brackets being the ring structure and the asterix being the central star. Because the ringworld spins, there's a centrifugal (or is it centripetal? IANAP) force keeping all the air/ocean/etc in. Like spinning a bucket full of water around.
not Niven... Banks (Score:2, Insightful)
Apart from basic shape they have nothing in common. The Halo's most apparant ancestor would be the orbitals ( http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Orbital_(The_Culture) [wikipedia.org] ) from Ian M Banks' "Culture " novels. It's rather apparant that Bungie drew much more inspiration from Banks' work than from Niven. http://www.marathon.org/story/halo_culture.html [marathon.org]
Another Smart Pop Book (Score:2)
Not to disrespect somebody's work, but the Smart Pop books I've read had a lot of silly high-school level logic and analysis.
The read much like transcripts of drunk chats with undergrad students. Not that this is always a bad thing. :)
Ah yes, Halo (Score:1, Flamebait)
I still remember the red alien speaking those words in the teaser trailer. Of course that was before the game got bastardized into an X-Box (*spits*) title.
Additionally I hope there's no one here who thinks Bungie invented the ringworld.
maths (Score:1)
09 F9 11 02 9D 74 E3 5B D8 41 56 C5 63 56 88 C0
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