You mean the Sudarsky classification? It seems a bit provisional to me (okay, and so is just about everything about exoplanet and certainly about their atmospheres and life forms) but at least it's out there. Gas giant details definitely goes on the list of potential articles. I'm not the greatest fan of the Companion's approach to skimming, mainly because it seems overly burdensome unless it's the focus of an adventure (okay I put it straight into one of those JTAS Patron encounters that got pulled from the Spinward Extents, so it's not like I hate it - but for 'background use' a single roll of success and another for duration seems about all you'd want to do in most circumstances), but adding general rules about gravity, radiation, and temperature issues of specific gas giant types or properties would be a good idea.I've been gradually working through this book for the last week or so and really loving it, thank you so much @Geir for all your hard work. One thing i would have loved to see (maybe omitted for reasons of space) would be something on classification of Gas Giant types, which (apparently) exist on a I to V spectrum with differing compositions. I can totally imagine how some would be more volatile and dangerous to skim from than others with abrasive metallic winds and more variable magnetic fields. Could this be a future JTAS article perhaps?
I'd love to do a proper ecosystem book (Climates and Critters?), but I think that would be behind three others that I've sort of committed to do... and really need to get cracking on...@Geir I have to say, I love this material so much that I have ordered a new 12" tablet just so that I can read the pdf easily while waiting for my hardcopy. I look forward to full books on social, economic and religious materials with the same level of depth![]()
Yes, but there is also the DM of -1D3-1 gives results of 0-2, no?
For the post stellar object that is part of the systemYes, but there is also the DM of -1
(coffee not working, but I'll try to answer correctly)For the post stellar object that is part of the system
Oh yeah, took me more than a month to spreadsheet it properly - dissecting strings in a cell without macros was a real headscratcher for a few days - hopefully you're doing it in an actual programming language.@Geir So, I'm going through the book trying to automate everything (huge project, I know),
It doesn't say that, but that's a really good idea for bigger stars. I have, honestly, a lazy reason for not wanting to make that change globally in that all the example text would need close examination and updating. And there would be carry-on effects for binary secondary star pairs disrupting orbits... so a bunch of text and calculations to fix for a .02 orbit effect.and I'm stuck on calculating available orbit numbers in multi-star systems. The procedure starts with this:
View attachment 1178
which implies that the MAO of each star should be calculated from the table. So far so good. But then immediately after it says this:
View attachment 1179
Which implies the minimum is .5 + eccentricity. It would make more sense for me to be MAO from the table + 0.5 + eccentricity, is that what's intended? It also raises questions in systems with multiple very large stars. Twinned F5 Ia stars take up a lot of space!
That's pretty much a straight T5 port, but I see your point here too. And we can't refer to MAO this early, since its' 'facts not in evidence' or some such. Okay, then, page 23:Additionally, earlier in the book you assign stellar orbit#'s with this table:
View attachment 1180
But that makes no consideration of the MAO which at its most extreme from the table could be 7.8, wiping out the entire Close range, let alone the companion. Do the orbit #'s start from the surface not the center of the primary?
Yes. Thanks. I may have glazed on those cases in testing, since my mind went to: nasty, don't want to go to a system like that - all primordial and hard to jump to - pick a cool (temperature-wise) planetoid belt for the mainworld and move on. But a graphical view would have showed the problem.Hopefully all that made sense lol, just trying to figure this sucker out. I love the book as a whole!
Ok, I think I follow: any result greater than +/- 2 on the 2D-7 would be outside the span, because the span is half above and half below, so yes, that is 1/3 outside.Question: by definition, about 80% of a belt's population orbits within its main span, but if you use the significant body orbit # generation procedure on page 74:
View attachment 1183
then only about 2/3 of the significant bodies will have orbit #s that fall within the main span. Is there a physical reason for this, or is this a design compromise to simplify orbit determination?
Thanks so much for the detailed response. I think your proposals make a lot of sense, and I'll follow through on them. Again, it's a wonderful resource for people who love this sort of thing, keep up the great work.Oh yeah, took me more than a month to spreadsheet it properly - dissecting strings in a cell without macros was a real headscratcher for a few days - hopefully you're doing it in an actual programming language.
It doesn't say that, but that's a really good idea for bigger stars. I have, honestly, a lazy reason for not wanting to make that change globally in that all the example text would need close examination and updating. And there would be carry-on effects for binary secondary star pairs disrupting orbits... so a bunch of text and calculations to fix for a .02 orbit effect.
Keep in mind that anything big enough to cause actual problems, like the F5 Ia twins mentioned, would follow the Primordial Star rules in Special Circumstances when it comes to making their planets. And they would be rare, like a handful a sector.
So, trying not to completely trash the 11 rules starting on page 38... rule 2 is already fairly long, but adding a sentence in the middle, right before 'Optionally':
For stars with an MAO of greater than 0.2 add the MAO of the larger star to the range of unavailable orbits.
And then for rule 5 (page 39), At the end add:
If a secondary star has an MAO of greater 0.2, add its MAO to the exclusion zone around the primary star.
That's pretty much a straight T5 port, but I see your point here too. And we can't refer to MAO this early, since its' 'facts not in evidence' or some such. Okay, then, page 23:
View attachment 1182
Yes. Thanks. I may have glazed on those cases in testing, since my mind went to: nasty, don't want to go to a system like that - all primordial and hard to jump to - pick a cool (temperature-wise) planetoid belt for the mainworld and move on. But a graphical view would have showed the problem.
I think the above three changes will cover 99% of the big star cases without disrupting the flow (or breaking the example).
(Well, maybe not in the biggest Class III in multi-star systems, but you could force your code to exclude objects inside of stars... although there are such things as contact binaries, and there might actually be 'survivor' planets in the rarefied atmospheres of Class IIIs - I think they found one such (former) candidate around a white dwarf, though it probably just migrated from an interaction with an undetected body.)
Thanks. As I think about it more, there's still a problem with your twin supergiant scenario if they are companions. I need to write an exception for giant star companions to push them out to something like 1D x MAO... but once I word that right I'll stick it in the feedback thread to make Bella's life easier.Thanks so much for the detailed response. I think your proposals make a lot of sense, and I'll follow through on them. Again, it's a wonderful resource for people who love this sort of thing, keep up the great work.
I am so happy that I've put this thought into your mind (if it wasn't already there). Loving the WBH.You mean the Sudarsky classification? It seems a bit provisional to me (okay, and so is just about everything about exoplanet and certainly about their atmospheres and life forms) but at least it's out there. Gas giant details definitely goes on the list of potential articles. I'm not the greatest fan of the Companion's approach to skimming, mainly because it seems overly burdensome unless it's the focus of an adventure (okay I put it straight into one of those JTAS Patron encounters that got pulled from the Spinward Extents, so it's not like I hate it - but for 'background use' a single roll of success and another for duration seems about all you'd want to do in most circumstances), but adding general rules about gravity, radiation, and temperature issues of specific gas giant types or properties would be a good idea.
I just checked the wiki article on Sudarsky's and it doesn't look like it covers ice giants, so it might not be an ideal method of covering the spectrum of everything from a gas dwarf to a superjovian, but its a start.
Thanks! I'm really glad the WBH is turning out to be a strong seller. I know how much I wanted something like this, but that didn't mean that others would be as interested.I am so happy that I've put this thought into your mind (if it wasn't already there). Loving the WBH.
If there is another set of JTAS books in the future, I could do an article in each. Already have three topics scribbled down: Trace atmospheres, variable stars (including flares), and gas giant types.There is a practical limitation on the size of books, but I could see yearly supplements to this looking at the many even edgier edge cases -- the sorts of things that regularly manifest in Anton Petrov's YouTube channel.
First, I certainly hope there are more JTASes. That said, I would prefer these articles (and Oort clouds, Wolf Rayet stars (the nearest is probably less than 10 sectors away...), and so on in a common volume for easier reference.If there is another set of JTAS books in the future, I could do an article in each. Already have three topics scribbled down: Trace atmospheres, variable stars (including flares), and gas giant types.
It would be good to do an expansion of the "cubic parsec" concept - the one issue I have with the current WBH is the comment about a single system within the parsec. You could easily fit more into an volume of (3.26 by 3.26 by 3.26ly). Firefly/Serenity works within such a configuration.If there is another set of JTAS books in the future, I could do an article in each. Already have three topics scribbled down: Trace atmospheres, variable stars (including flares), and gas giant types.