alfaniner
Penultimate Amazing
Has anyone yet mentioned that the Coriolos effect would might produce some strange sensations when walking in a rotating environment designed to produce “artificial gravity?
It depends on how big the ring is.
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One of the things I find amusing in science fiction is that when spacecraft start getting his with enemy weapons, they might lose power. The warp engines go off line. The lights fail. At some point there is only enough power for life support, and that is about to go, and everyone will die unless someone can effect repairs before the last commercial.
But the gravity generators never go offline, even in ships that have been adrift in space for hundreds of years.
In all the Star Trek I've seen (almost 100% up to two years ago) I can recall gravity being a story point only once. I think it was the premiere of Enterprise, where Travis found a "sweet spot" (null gravity) on the ship where he'd go to relax, and said every ship had one.
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