Christmas Time! (And Two Weeks Off)

By this point I’m hoping you see how stuff is going to fit together, at least how our group of heroes is going to be formed.

I know there area lot of people who hate these kinds of overly specific coincidences in stories. They find it trite, and maybe a little too easy. I disagree with the sentiment that chance encounters and random meetings of portent, or whatever, shouldn’t be used. Though you always want to be as original as you can in your stories, drawing, everything, let’s face it; there are no new ideas. Well, okay, there are very few new ideas. But that isn’t a bad thing. There aren’t any new notes, right? (At least I don;’t think there are)

There are very few new notes. (Right?)

But that doesn’t stop us from creating new songs, right? It’s because of the new way that the notes are arranged. I feel the same way about my story telling. I may not have a lot of new ideas for you, but I’ll take the old ones, some of my favorite at least, and try and arrange them in a new and interesting way.

I’m going to double check to make sure this one posts by just doing it now and checking, and I want to let you know I”l not be posting for the next two Wednesdays. (After today) I’m doing a road trip back home to see all of my family. This time next week I’ll actually be in the car with my wife winding our way west. Alliteration! I’ll be gone exactly a week, until making our way back home. Lots of time on potentially hazardous roads. I’m excited, but a little scared. I plan to make the most of it, though. Keep an eye on the facebook page. I’ll post some holiday pics!

ALSO OH YEAH BTW STAR WARS.

Space is a Thing, or the Absence of a Thing… I Guess.

I really like Brooklyn 99. It’s really funny and full of fantastic performances. I really recommend it and am sure to catch it every week. That being said, this week’s episode really disappointed me. Not in a real way. The episode was great. It disappointed me in a nerd way, which is worse. :) Amy Santiago, you’ve broken my heart.

It’s a scene in the episode where she explains that a parsec is actually a measure of distance, ending with the comment “and that is one of the inconsistencies of Star Wars.” It’s actually very consistent, Amy, and even if Neil DeGrass Tyson can stop by and not take the time to tell you all about it, I can.

Here we go, kids!

The reference here is to Han’s saying, “the ship that did the Kessel run in less than 12 parsecs” for those who aren’t sure what we’re talking about. Weird that he uses a measure of distance to impress us about time. Right?

First, we have to make sure we understand how hyperspace travel, or any space travel, works in both the star wars universe, and in ours. Later in the movie Han describes “it takes a moment to get the coordinates from the navicomputer. Otherwise we could fly into a moon or too close to a planet, and that would end your trip REAL quick.” The coordinates he was waiting for were likely a series of coordinates; little jumps chained together to create a ‘safe’ path to their destination.

That means even hyperspace travel in Star Wars isn’t a straight line. The path is weaving in and out of obstacles, like a highway curving in between the mountains. What’s more, though, you have to watch out for the gravity of these celestial bodies as well. Every object that has mass pulls every other object toward it. Big ones, like stars and stuff, have giant fields that pull passing objects toward them as they travel past. The need to avoid those hazards makes the path even more winding, an even longer distance to get where you are going.

We only hear about the Kessel system a few times in the movies, and never get to see it. We only need to suppose one thing about it for the movie to hold together just fine. Maybe Kessel is a dense system, with lots of planets and moons. Maybe a binary star? We just need to accept that it has lots of celestial bodies that need to be navigated and that travelling through it is usually a winding mess.

A ship that was fast enough to use it’s momentum to easily escape the gravitational pull of those obstacles would be able to cut travel time and distance out of their journey, like hugging the curves on a racetrack. A ship that was so fast it could cut the curves completely, chopping huge amounts of distance out of the journey because it can use it’s speed and momentum to virtually ignore gravitational pulls… a ship that can shorten the travel distance to less than 12 parsecs… That would be a fast ship, indeed.

Astrophysics is fun!