Fritz_Brown
Super Moderator
But, aren't they still within 100D for the sun? I thought they had to sit "between" the large body and the larger body it orbits? (It's been a while since I looked at LaGrange points, or figured 100D from Sol.)
That's my recolletion as well. I'm recalling seeing a Penrose diagram of a rotating black hole with a trajectory that didn't hit the singularity that emerged into negative time. I'm equating negative time with faster than light travel. I don't know if that's a bad assumption or not.The rotating black hole, IIRC, also gives time travel.
Here, here. I'm not even sure you need to remove psionics. There are several experiments in quantum mechanics that show instantaneuos action at a distance. Combine with the notions of the effects of an observer on a system and the human tradition of mystics and gurus achieving enlightenment. Who knows maybe such powers are possible, it's just all the people who claim them to make money never seem to actually have them.Whenever people deny that Traveller (at least CT, less psionics) is hard SF, it bothers me. Hard SF is defined as doing nothing impossible and very little implausable. People who say Traveller is not hard SF usually have no idea what is possible or plausable.
Rumour sprendin' a-'round in that Texas town
'bout that shack outside LaGrange
and you know what I'm talkin' about.
Just let me know if you wanna go
to that home out on the range.
They gotta lotta nice girls.
Have mercy.
A haw, haw, haw, haw, a haw.
A haw, haw, haw.
Well, I hear it's fine if you got the time
and the ten to get yourself in.
A hmm, hmm.
And I hear it's tight most ev'ry night,
but now I might be mistaken.
hmm, hmm, hmm, hmm.
Have mercy.
Two of the classic La Grange points (and the most stable) are the "trojans", an orbital dameter ahead and behind in the same orbit as the planet/moon.Originally posted by Fritz88:
But, aren't they still within 100D for the sun? I thought they had to sit "between" the large body and the larger body it orbits? (It's been a while since I looked at LaGrange points, or figured 100D from Sol.)
Jupiter is about 5.2 Astronomical Units (on average) from the Sun, so about 4.2AU from Earth. Without doing the calculations if the Sun 100D reaches to about 1AU, Jupiter 100D won't be anywhere close to Earth. Given that Jupiter and the Sun have about the same density Sol 1.4; Jupiter 1.3.Now, coming from the other direction, how far does the effect of Jupiter's gravity reach toward Sol?