Editing Lore

Jump to navigation Jump to search

Warning: You are not logged in. Your IP address will be publicly visible if you make any edits. If you log in or create an account, your edits will be attributed to your username, along with other benefits.

The edit can be undone. Please check the comparison below to verify that this is what you want to do, and then save the changes below to finish undoing the edit.

Latest revision Your text
Line 414: Line 414:
 
Solar pinhole canonically skips material from the core of a nearby star. Unlike skip and farskip, we do not observe the target matter beginning its journey, thus the effect can begin as soon as casting time is started to give it the benefit of the doubt. However the target is also not next to the psycaster. This means that causality must propagate at the speed of light to the core, before matter could be skipped from the core to the psycaster's chosen point again at the speed of light, otherwise faster-than-light transfer of information and/or movement has occurred.  
 
Solar pinhole canonically skips material from the core of a nearby star. Unlike skip and farskip, we do not observe the target matter beginning its journey, thus the effect can begin as soon as casting time is started to give it the benefit of the doubt. However the target is also not next to the psycaster. This means that causality must propagate at the speed of light to the core, before matter could be skipped from the core to the psycaster's chosen point again at the speed of light, otherwise faster-than-light transfer of information and/or movement has occurred.  
  
With a 0.25 real second casting time, the in-game time to cast is {{#expr: 0.25 / ((16 + 40/60)/(24 * 60)) }} seconds. The maximum distance that light could travel in that time is approximately 6.5 million kilometers, and the maximum return trip is only 3.25 million km. This is closer to the star than even the minimum habitable zone of a very dim red dwarf at ~4.8 million kilometers. There are also no other effects that imply that the sun is that close.  
+
With a 0.25 real second casting time, the in-game time to cast is {{#expr: 0.25 / ((16 + 40/60)/(24 * 60)) }} seconds. The maximum distance that light could travel in that time is approximately 6.5 million kilometers, and the maximum return trip is only 3.25 million km. This is closer to the star than even the minimum habitable zone of a very dim red dwarf at ~4.8 million kilometers. There are also no other effects that imply that the sun is that close. For reference, if the psycast was cast on Earth, the real-time casting time would have to be {{#expr: 998 * ((16 + 40/60)/(24 * 60)) round 2}} seconds even at light speed. In addition, a pawn with [[aiming time]] reductions, such as from [[trigger-happy]] or the [[Ideoligion#Shooting specialist|Shooting specialist]] role, would have an even shorter casting time.  
 
 
For reference, propagation to the core and back would take ~16.6 minutes in in-game time if solar pinhole was cast on a planet as distant from its star as Earth is from the Sun, if the effect traveled at light speed. This would result in a real-time casting time of ''{{#expr: 998 * ((16 + 40/60)/(24 * 60)) round 2}} seconds'', instead of only 0.25.  
 
 
 
In addition, a pawn with [[aiming time]] reductions, such as from [[trigger-happy]] or the [[Ideoligion#Shooting specialist|Shooting specialist]] role, would have an even shorter casting time.  
 
  
 
Thus, the gameplay of solar pinhole does conflict with the canon around FTL travel.
 
Thus, the gameplay of solar pinhole does conflict with the canon around FTL travel.

Please note that all contributions to RimWorld Wiki are considered to be released under the CC BY-SA 3.0 (see RimWorld Wiki:Copyrights for details). If you do not want your writing to be edited mercilessly and redistributed at will, then do not submit it here.
You are also promising us that you wrote this yourself, or copied it from a public domain or similar free resource. Do not submit copyrighted work without permission!

Cancel Editing help (opens in new window)