-Daniel- said:
Condottiere said:
Outside of battle damage or running into a meteor, spaceship systems and hulls aren't really stressed in Traveller.
Wouldn't there be stress when they land and take off from a planet with an atmosphere?
a geat deal of stress actually. depending on the shape, and airflow around the hull. Blocky designs would be bulldozing air out of the way, loading stress on the superstructure. It would be as if it were standing structure in a force five hurricane.
If a ship has a wide slab sided shape the side of the ship would act like a sail. In strong cross winds, the hull would be getting lesser stresses as the ship tried to turn act like a weather vane and turn into the wind, and the flight control system countered by applying thrust to counter the torsion forces. this doesn't sound like a problem, but the Tacoma Narrows bridge was destroyed by nothing more than strong winds and bad design. and some skyscrapers actually sway in the breeze enough to give people inside motion sickness.
Then there's heat stress. The ship has been in space for an extended period some of its hull is going to be welllllll below zero, now it's sucking heat out of the local atmosphere and expanding, changing shape and applying stress to everything attached to it. a temperature change of several hundred degrees from near absolute zero to room temperature can seriously distort materials.
The pressure hull of the ship is also going to react to the change in environment. It is designed to contain the pressure of the internal atmosphere, with no external counterforce. as it enters an atmosphere it will contract as atmospheric pressures apply a counter force to the gasses inside the pressure hull. this will cause it to change its shape slightly or if improperly designed it's shape will change drastically..
local Gravity would load on a constant strain against the ship. Long narrow designs would tend to try and bend in the middle. thrusters would counter but that transfers stress to the anchor points for the thrusters.
then we come to a serious issue, weight. cargo and drives are without a doubt heavy. now it's assumed thrusters, and hull designs compensate and negate these stresses. but depending on how the internal layout is arranged the stresses will try to warp the hull and as external gravity changes the internal gravity plates have to adjust to the new loads, which transfers strain to the superstructure of the ship. If a cargo is not properly balanced those stresses will be applied differently to various portions of the structure. this will try to warp the structure to find a point of equilibrium.
now all these forces can be countered by the use of thrusters, gravitics, and clever engineering. but the stresses are still there and if they aren't properly distributed across the entire superstructure of the ship it will result in sections of the structure taking undue stess, and potentially failing. A ship crew that doesn't take all the proper steps to ensure that stress damage doesn't occur, or the ship is improperly designed, has a manufacturing error, or is old as dirt, these stresses can cause a structural failure....at which point the ship can crumble and fall out of the sky on some poor souls head.