cthia wrote:I disagree. It isn't so simple to handwave away. I only cited the reference to astronauts as an exhibit to the kinds of problems faced. The Mars trilogy really did the subject some justice. Prolonged periods of time are not as long as you may think.
Also, what happens when there are ships shared by crew of different planets?
For that matter, why weren't there many deaths on Hades amongst, for one, the San Martinos and one Mateo's son? There were different races on Hades for quite some time.
Edit:
It isn't just an extended exposure to weightlessness. It is an extended exposure to a significant difference in native gravity. A "significant difference" is common place in the Honorverse. And you shouldn't read too much into "significant difference" or "extended periods" for that matter.
I'd argue that most people in the Honorverse actually don't live on planets with significant differences in Gravity. Mars is 1/3 the gravity of Earth; that's pretty significant, but most planets in the Honorverse seem to be in the 0.8 - 1.2 gravity range. That's not so significant.
If you threw prisoners from a 0.8 gee world on the extremely high gravity (2.7 gees) San Martin and expected them to be able to move around you might expect some significant injuries or even deaths. But going the other way is unlikely to cause issues
until you suddenly move back to the heavy grav environment.
True microgravity can cause bone loss issues even in fully grown people that are very slow to recover, but somewhat reduced gravity is not thought to cause those issues to the same extent.
But the nice thing about grav plates is you can adjust them room by room, and you can slowly scale up the gravity to work your way back up to your normal baseline. You'd still be having issues (unless Honorverse medical nanotech can deal with the bone density issues in a way that current tech can't) if you were spending a month or more in zero g, but spending it at 0.8 gees when you're used to 1.1 gees (or even 2 gees) should cause far less degradation than microgravity.
But I admit that's a laymen's understanding. Though I would say that nobody has data on prolonged exposure to somewhat reduced gravity. We've got tons of data about 1g, and a moderate amount about 1 - 12 month stays in 0g. But basically non about 0.3g or 0.8g or 1.2g - so I believe a fair bit of this is speculation on all parts.