cthia wrote:Some are claiming that it would ignite the atmosphere. It is interesting to say the least. Has it ever happened in textev? I doubt spontaneous combustion of the atmosphere or there'll be many deaths in textev because I find it extremely difficult to believe that there have been no wedge on atmosphere accidents throughout the history of the tech.
At any rate, I never proposed an Earth landing. I was proposing some sort of suspended air landing via counter-grav landing zones. But I don't know if that kind of control would be possible in atmosphere. Surely thrusters would be of no use then.
I'm beginning to wonder if it would be feasible to build counter-grav ability into our ships for counter grav assisted landings with wedge shut down?
What are the limitations of counter-grav technology?
I doubt you'd get more that local ignition in the atmosphere - there just isn't a fuel source for the oxygen to react to. And small, short duration, wedges are used in the atmosphere - the surface to air missiles are small impeller heads, as are the ground attack missiles carried by assault shuttles. When Honor's pinace is shot down on approach to Harrington Steading that's by an impeller head SAM operating in the atmosphere.
Still there's a huge difference between a man portable missile's wedge, that might be a few meters wide, a pinnace's that's a few km wide, and a starship's that over 100 km wide. The larger wedges are more powerful, as well as covering more area, so they should impart higher velocity to anything they touch and they'll touch a larger volume of air (or ground)
As long as you don't mind hitting things with extremely powerful plasma streams thrusters should work just fine in the atmosphere. But using them to land, even with assistance from counter-grav, would melt or fuse the ground plus since you're hitting it with fusing plasma also make it radioactive. I'm unconvinced that landing a ship is actually a quicker more efficient way to load that using a lot of small craft designed for planetary landing. Though at a bit more risk you could probably load people into rescue balls, stick them in a big shipping container, and have a shuttle snag it with tractors and haul it to orbit. That'd maximize flying time by separating the loading and unloading of evacuees from the actual craft flying up and down (since you'd presumably have enough rescue balls and cargo containers to have several loading and unloading for each shuttle in transit - allowing that to occur while the shuttle is making its next round trip.