recopy: (ah no more exclamation points actually)
MegaMan.EXE ([personal profile] recopy) wrote in [community profile] driftfleet2015-07-12 12:11 am

2 >> nerd life is hard

Who: Megaman and you!
Broadcast: Fleetwide!
Action: Moping at the desk in the engineer's office on the SS Golden, lights on as usual
When: RIGHT HERE RIGHT NOW somewhere around the space equivalent of midnight

Hello, I'd like to ask a question for anyone still awake. Some of you have been here for a little while now, right? I was wondering...has anyone ever been able to contact people they know back home here? Has Atroma ever allowed it, I guess.

My friends back home are probably really worried about me by now...I don't think they would know what's going on. To them I might have suddenly become missing! And I'd like to let them know that I'm okay, if I can. But I don't know if there's a way...

And also, since
[ah] maybe I'm going to be here for awhile too. Does anyone have a database about outer space that I could borrow for a bit? A book or a data file you'd be willing to lend? Just, something that gets detailed about how things work in general out there. I have basic knowledge on the subject, but I'd like to learn more of I can.

Thank you.
geonomy: (☆ like a moonbeam across my face)

[personal profile] geonomy 2015-07-28 06:59 am (UTC)(link)
If it's a map for navigation, then if a star isn't there anymore, it might disappear as we get closer to it. Not that we won't see a light show or anything; when stars die, they explode in what's called a supernova, and they can last for weeks, or even months! We ought to see that first, if we get closer to a star that isn't there anymore.

As for star charts measuring the distance of them... [Clay hunches over a bit, finger pressed in the space between his eyes.] That's a bit more difficult. We'd need a lot of time on one planet, not just the limited time we've been staying. See, the way astronomers find out how far away a star is in space is by setting up a decent spot, marking where a star is in the sky precisely, then coming back to that same spot six months later and calculating the difference in the viewing angle of the star. There, they use a method called triangulation, which uses trigonometry to give them a distance.

The problem with that is we never spend six months on a planet, and we'd need to know how fast the planet in question rotates around its sun and on its axis. And even with that method, you can't go beyond 400 light years. [He frowns, his eyes crossing to look at his finger.] There is another way, but that's a little more difficult. We'd really need a telescope or something like it for that.
Edited 2015-07-28 07:17 (UTC)
geonomy: (☆ i don't think the world is sold)

[personal profile] geonomy 2015-08-07 05:20 am (UTC)(link)
[Clay leans in towards the communicator to see the sketches and notes, hand on his chin and a frown on his face. Hmm... that could work just as well. After all, his form of measuring star distance is from his Earth, and there ought to be other ways out here and from other worlds as well.]

Unfortunately, we don't have a comm officer on the Vanquish, though as the pilot, I've got some access to their radar tools. I could probably use that to measure the distance, then use some of my own calculations to expand further on that. [This is actually pretty exciting, and Clay looks as if there's a thousand ideas at once going off in his head. So much to do! So much to discover! But first...]

Though if we could build a telescope, that'd help this project come along as well as others we might have. See, astronomers can also tell the distance of a star by their color spectrum. There's a relationship between a star's color and brightness, and from its brightness, we can tell how far away a distant star is. By using a telescope, we can see what colors a star has, then determine its true brightness from there. Then, when you compare the true brightness from its apparent one - that is, how it looks from our current position, then you can figure out how far away the star is!

It's not the most accurate method, but it's proven to be very close.
Edited 2015-08-07 06:23 (UTC)
geonomy: (☆ said no more counting dollars)

[personal profile] geonomy 2015-08-12 03:44 pm (UTC)(link)
[Clay opens his mouth -- and then shuts it, once he realizes just how much goes into building a telescope. He'd have to explain complicated things, and Megaman probably wouldn't get it if he didn't have a diagram.

So Clay leans away out of the camera's range to grab some paper without explanation, only to lean his head back into the frame once he realizes what he's done.]


You mind if I write and draw it out, actually? It's kind of complicated, and if you try to make one, it might be easier to have a guideline with you!

[He's seen the files both NASA and GYAXA gave away for people to make their own telescopes, after all; he's pretty sure he remembers how they're done.]
geonomy: (☆ so bright)

[personal profile] geonomy 2015-08-21 08:52 am (UTC)(link)
I don't mind staying up!

[He says, as he ends up yawning as soon as he's done with that sentence. Wow, way to go body, curse your sudden but inevitable brotrayal.]

Haha... yeah, okay, let's meet up sometime! That way, we can exchange everything we've written and discovered. And I'll be sure to have the telescope diagram drawn out for you, too!