OK... this is interesting.
Take the Earth. If we use a Gravity Limit of 0.01m/s2, the Jump Limit is around 200,000km from the centre of the planet.
If we take the OTU 100D limit, the 100D Limit is at 1,275,600 km from the centre of the planet.
If we calculate the Gravity Field for Earth at the 100D limit (GM/R^2) we get 0.000245 m/s2. This is a Small Number (smaller than the 0.01 m/s2 I've been using previously).
If we calculate the "Tidal Force" (GM/R^3) for Earth at the 100D limit, we get a even smaller number of 1.93e-13 (erm... I think the units are m/s3? I'm really rusty on this). This is a Very Small Number, which we shall call F.
If we take the gravity strength at Earth's 100D and the Tidal Force at Earth's 100D and use those to calculate the "Gravity Limit" and the "Tidal Limit" for each object by using D = SQRT(GM/g) and D = CUBERT(GM/F), then we get the following table (all distances are in km). So now you can directly compare 100D, a grav jump limit of 0.01m/s2, a grav jump limit of 0.000245m/s2 and a tidal force limit of 1.92e-13.
</font><blockquote>code:</font><hr /><pre style="font-size:x-small; font-family: monospace;"> m r 100d g (0.01) g (0.000245) F-limit
Moon 0.01e 1738 347600 19966 127557 274820
Mercury 0.05e 2439.7 487940 44645 285225 469935
Mars 0.1e 3390 678000 63137 403369 592081
Venus 0.8e 6052 1210400 178579 1140901 1184163
Earth 1e 6378 1275600 199658 1275566 1275601
Neptune 15e 24624 4924800 773271 4940247 3145902
Uranus 15e 25362 5072400 773271 4940247 3145902
Saturn 100e 58232 11646400 1996577 12755663 5920814
Jupiter 1j 69911 13982200 3559287 22739447 8704945
Sol 1s 696265 139253000 115205847 736023156 88411153
Antares 15s 750000000 1.5E+11 446190326 2850605425 218040653</pre>[/QUOTE]Hopefully this is correct, I'm in a bit of a rush so I can't check this. But although Anthony has said that using a Tidal Limit gives results close to the 100D limit, I'm not seeing that here. Maybe he can elaborate on how he figures that (or point out where I've done something wrong
).