alj_sf wrote:TN4994 wrote:If in the future a new technology supersedes ours, will the documentation on the stirling be important enough to survive?
The Carnot cycle is the most fundamental cycle in thermodynamic. Without it, you cannot understand any engine. But the Carnot engine is purely theoretical and cannot be built nor really simulated.
Stirling cycle is a close approximation and you can built or simulate it. In fact you can make a model from paper that works on the heat of a cup of coffee. Don't produce any real power, but do works.
From there you can go to Otto or Rankine Cycle (resp IC engines and Turbines).
So Stirling is always the first engine studied, and unless laws of physic change, it will stay there.
Which in turn means that even if Nimue Alban was a tactical officer on a starship, one of the Inner Circle scientists -- and we've got a physicist and a chemist already -- will eventually be looking at thermodynamics. So will anyone interested in making steam engines better. Which might well start to happen organically, once steam engines come in contact with enough smart people.
It might even be funny; one of Houseman's, I'm sorry, I can't remember the mangled spelling -- engineers, or a student, or some guy at a factory with one of the first stationary engines, could plausibly show up with a bunch of math and some diagrams and a burning fervor to build this other kind of engine.
Which presents the poor Inner Circle member with a bit of a quandary; this is exactly what the core objectives want to happen, and it will make a hash out of the industrial rationalization plans again. And His Late Highness wants to move the development to Emerald, and is looking utterly innocent about it...