Theemile wrote:Weird Harold wrote:A resonance zone pinches IN, rather than fans out. From the hyperlimit of the Terminus to the diameter of the star (and/or other body big enough to have a hyperlimit, like a Jovian planet.)
From the terminus to the star would be a straight line through the hyperlimit, but not to the full diameter of the star's hyperlimit.
Au Contraire - in the Manticorian system diagram in Jayne's RMN, the resonance zone widens to the hyperlimit, covering ~40% of the hyperlimit facing the wormhole. (on the 2d map)
Makes you wonder why no one noticed it for 200 years...
And At All Costs describes is at (bold added)
At All Costs: Ch. 62 wrote:Any wormhole terminus associated with a star formed a conical volume in hyper, with the wormhole at its apex and a base centered on the star and twice as wide as its hyper limit, in which hyper-space astrogation became less than totally reliable. The bigger the terminus or junction, the stronger the resonance effect . . . and the Manticoran Wormhole Junction, with its multiple termini, was the largest ever discovered. The resonance zone it produced was more of a tsunami, and it didn't just make astrogation "less than reliable." It made it the next best thing to flatly impossible. Any translation out of the resonance zone risked serious astrogational uncertainty, and any translation into the zone would have been no more than a complicated way to commit suicide.
Though it doesn't say so, it pretty much
has to be weaker towards the fringes.
As you say, even with the low levels of interstellar trading happening before the Junction was discovered there's no way Manticore could have missed that 100% of ships attempting to enter n-space over 50% the circumference of their hyper limit simply never arrived.
Though a bit later in AAC it does mention that each planet is shielded by the RZ for half it's year, which implies the full cone is too dangerous to jump into -- which is crazy- that couldn't possibly escape notice.