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September 27th, 2005, 07:29 PM
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Shrapnel Fanatic
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Re: Semi-OT: A question on Power Ratios in Sci-fi
You also need to increase the chance-per-turn of an event in settings.txt.
There is a setting each for low, medium, and high event frequency.
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September 28th, 2005, 02:09 PM
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Captain
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Re: Semi-OT: A question on Power Ratios in Sci-fi
Oi, folks, back on topic! We're supposed to be helping out Starhawk here. Just a few thoughts on 'tech balance' from my 3rd Dynasty Universe (the one Hell is for Heroes is set in. Look forward to a few new chapters this week, btw). In that universe, humanity is signifcantly more advanced than any other race in the galaxy, aside from one which is ridiculously more advanced but has little interest in the affairs of 'inferior' races. However, humanity isn't terribly aggressive in this universe, since they got lucky in the grand scheme of things and have a large number of habitable worlds. I've got a spreadsheet somewhere with all the details, but just winging it, the Terran Imperium (as it is known) consists of 2,252 habitable worlds, of which only 1,823 are colonized. In contrast, the Tauran Empire, which is roughly the same size cubic-lightyear-wise has 1,452 worlds to it's name and has colonized them all. This creates tension between the two empires, since the Taurans want to expand, but humanity isn't about to start giving away bits of it's empire, even if it hasn't really got a use for them.
Terran ships tend to be fast, heavily armoured and pack so much firepower it would liquify your brain to even think about it. The Taurans on the other hand tend to just cobble together ships with an eye towards building them quickly, rather than having them last very long once it hits the fan.
Other races have mainly been confined to a few star systems, and eargerly greet any conflict between Terrans and Taurans (yes, the name similarity is on purpose) as an oportunity to slice off a little piece of the big pie.
As for the whole whether or not an FTL race would have found us by now, I think most arguments are flawed by assuming that an alien race would have even remotely the same motivations as our own. Furthermore, while I find the notion that we are the only sentient life in the universe absurd on simple grounds of probablilty, even if there is more than one sentient race per galaxy in 99.99999999999% of the universe, ours could still be one of the many where only one sentient race has evolved.
And someone just answer one question for me because I honestly don't know the answer: Our solar system is located in one of the arms of the Milky Way's spiral, now does that make it part of the older (first to form) or newer parts of the galaxy?
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September 28th, 2005, 02:30 PM
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Shrapnel Fanatic
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Re: Semi-OT: A question on Power Ratios in Sci-fi
Quote:
And someone just answer one question for me because I honestly don't know the answer: Our solar system is located in one of the arms of the Milky Way's spiral, now does that make it part of the older (first to form) or newer parts of the galaxy?
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The sun is 5 billion years old.
It is a 3rd generation star; it contains heavy elements which can only be produced in superheavy stars and supernovae.
The largest stars burn up in less than a billion years. The smallest ones can last nearly forever.
http://astronomy.swin.edu.au/GHZ/GHZmovie.html
The general idea is that it takes longer to make enough heavy elements for rocky planet formation in the outskirts of the galaxy since there are fewer supernovae. But close in, there are too many supernovae, and your planets get scorched too often.
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September 28th, 2005, 03:42 PM
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Sergeant
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Re: Semi-OT: A question on Power Ratios in Sci-fi
Seems to have alot of newer stars.
"Sol is located 67 ly north of the galactic plane within a roughly 200-ly wide band that is rich in gas, dust, and newborn stars," from this page
http://members.nova.org/~sol/chview/chv5.htm
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September 28th, 2005, 07:07 PM
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Brigadier General
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Re: Semi-OT: A question on Power Ratios in Sci-fi
"north" ???
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September 28th, 2005, 07:30 PM
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Shrapnel Fanatic
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Re: Semi-OT: A question on Power Ratios in Sci-fi
Based on spin and the right hand rule, I suspect.
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September 28th, 2005, 08:28 PM
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Brigadier General
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Re: Semi-OT: A question on Power Ratios in Sci-fi
Then there would be a "south" but no "east" or "west".
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September 28th, 2005, 08:40 PM
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Sergeant
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Re: Semi-OT: A question on Power Ratios in Sci-fi
"Spinward" and "anti-spinward". 
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September 28th, 2005, 09:27 PM
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Brigadier General
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Re: Semi-OT: A question on Power Ratios in Sci-fi
The entire quote is more precise: "... Sol lies less than half way out (26,000 ly) from the galactic center ... on the core-ward side of one of the galaxy's spiral arms named after Orion... Sol is located 67 ly north of the galactic plane ..."
So we have Radius, direction (if you can call in the direction of Orion a true direction) and distance above the galactic plane. That's cylindrical coordinates.
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September 28th, 2005, 10:37 PM
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Sergeant
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Re: Semi-OT: A question on Power Ratios in Sci-fi
One could also give directions relative to something outside our galaxy, such as a prominent galaxy or cluster of galaxies more or less on the plane of the Milky Way. Movement around the galactic center would eventually change our position relative to this marker, of course, but differential movement would do the same with regard to stars inside our galaxy.
A Wikipedia article describes a spherical coordinate system for the Milky Way:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Galactic_plane
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