Am I correct in understanding that atmosphere codes E and F have basically swapped meanings in Traveller 5 vs. every other edition of Traveller?That is, a world that would be atmosphere E in another edition would be atmosphere F in Traveller 5, and vice versa?
Hmm... I used the older definitions for my sector data on Explorerbase, but since TravellerMap users the T5/MgT definitions, data would have to be changed around. That could be the case for any number of the older SEC sectors, as well.
Hmm... I used the older definitions for my sector data on Explorerbase, but since TravellerMap users the T5/MgT definitions, data would have to be changed around. That could be the case for any number of the older SEC sectors, as well.
What is the difference between E (thin, low) and codes 2-5?
Or D (dense, high) and codes 8-9?
E (Thin, Low) means the planet surface is either in vacuum or near-vacuum, but enough atmosphere accumulates in very low valleys or crevasses to be breathable.
D (dense, high) means that at the surface the atmosphere is too dense to be breathable, but on high mountains or plateaus it thins out enough to be breathable.
How do these manifest? What are the different pressures between too little/just right/too much?
How much elevation change is necessary? How much gravity? I assume that the higher pressures at lower altitude are there because of the "weight" of the upper atmosphere compressing the lower atmosphere?
How low must a valley be, how high the canyon walls to contain the atmosphere? Does the atmosphere thin out at the ends of the canyon?
(I'm looking in the Ringworld RPG for numbers... and having to fudge and work from memories of the novels, as well.)
Both appear to be the prototype writeups for these situations.
I remember Louis Wu and Speaker-to-Animals dicussing it but it wasn't anything they both couldn't handle, i.e. no respirator/oxy bottle/filter mask needed.
Other volumes note that the surface isn't livable pressure. You can function in 0.2 Atm for a few hours... if it's at least 0.05 bar PPO2, you can stay alive and dizzy... but you'll die if you try to live there unaided.
Hell, the shuttle EVAs are in 0.2 Bar... PPO2 0.19 Bar as well... (the remainder is their exhaled CO2...).
Supplemental O2 for ground dwellers is recommended at about 9 psi (12K ft MSL), and essential for significant function at about 7 PSI (about 0.47 bar, 0.1 bar PPO2). High altitude adapted folk can function in about 1/2 the PPO2...
People function in 6 PSI with supplemental O2 on an annual basis - climbing Everest or K2, they hit 0.32 Bar, and PPO2 0.07 bar... But only the sherpas and some south americans can do so for more than a few hours without supplemental O2...
I thought it was 'Mt. Lookit That !' that had a narrow area of breathable air. The Ring World had people living at surface level and breathing fine. Thats the books I was refering to.