I don't see why they can't be improved, what if company X invents the Low Berth, and says, "isn't it great." Company Y says, "You low berths are killing people!" Company X says, "Well what choice do they have, they can't afford high passage so they risk death." Company Y says, "Well we can reduce the cost of mid passage by cutting down on radiation shielding, so they take a few rads while traveling in space, who cares, people want their cut rate tickets don't they?" Company Z says, "Maybe there is a way to reduce the risk for low berth passengers." Company X says, "Don't bother, people know what they're getting into and they don't mind dying!" Company Z says, "I don't think so, well were going to invest some money improving the process of freezing people, you can continue selling your death traps and see what happens."
A few years later, company X says, "Hey what happened, why aren't people buying our low berths anymore?" "Its company Z," said the adviser, "They are selling low berths that don't kill their passengers as much, and people aren't buying our low berths anymore!" "What's the matter," Company X exclaimed, "They knew the risk when they got into our product, why aren't they doing it anymore?" "There is a better product on the market," explains the adviser, "and we didn't invest in improved safety and our competition did, besides we only offered our low berths in one color, black!"
Infojunky said:
Tom Kalbfus said:
But contra gravity would solve that problem anyway - until it stopped working, then hopefully it can glide long enough for the crew to get to the lifeboats - which have contragravity and thrusters also.
I don't know if gliding is all that much of a requirement, remember a F4 Phantom has the Glide Ratio of a Brick...
Doesn't matter how fast its falling, as there is nothing to crash into, as the atmosphere gets denser the fall will slow, even if it was a brick, past a certain point, it will sink like a ship in the ocean, rather than fall. This should allow plenty of time to get to the life boats. As a crash is not imminent, what will happen is the ship will eventually get crushed by the atmosphere, but before that happens the ships fall will be slowed by the thickening atmosphere. You heard for instance that you don't need a parachute to make a soft landing on Venus, the heat will kill you, the pressure will kill you, but one thing you won't get killed by is crashing into the surface of Venus. A gas giant like Jupiter is colder than Venus, by the time it reaches room temperature, the atmosphere is already denser than Earth, teminal velocity won't be that high no matter what the glide charateristics of your spacecraft is.