Loren Pechtel wrote:I consider things like Starfire to be pseudo-velocity drives rather than warp drives. They don't feel the same to me--warp drives simply amplify your speed, they don't flip a switch and move you to some high speed until you turn them off again. I don't really know how to describe them but warp doesn't feel at all right.
We see quite a lot that if the warp drive cuts out, the ship drops out of warp in the middle of nowhere. So to stop, all one needs to do is stop feeding energy to the drive. Except when the plot requires otherwise (they had to reverse power to stop the warp drive after the Kosinski modifications in "Where No One Has Gone Before" [TNG]).
Loren Pechtel wrote:I am not saying it moves the universe. I'm saying that the reference frame for figuring what the drive does is the intersection of the wedge with the universe, thus the universe. The drive still moves the ship as normal.
Consider a car vs an airplane. An airplane operates in the reference frame of the air, it is not exactly that uncommon for small planes to fly while tied to the ground in big storms and there have been observed incidents in the air where a plane was flying backwards by ground speed.
A car, however, always operates in the reference frame of the ground. The movement of the air might increase drag but that's all.
A normal space drive is somehow pushing the ship, it's operating in the context of the ship--the equivalent of the airplane. I'm saying that the wedge is shoving against the fabric of the universe and thus operating in the reference frame of the universe--the equivalent of the car. It is not immune to the mass increase, though--eventually the acceleration will drop off because you don't have the power to overcome the increased mass of your ship, especially as your output is likewise being reduced by the slowing of time.
That's kind of hard to believe, but at the same time it sounds true. Before I speculate, let me just say that RFC must have invented the particle shield limit to avoid having to answer this question in the first place, and that the accelerations matching Newton's Laws instead of Einstein are an oversight, just so he could calculate them.
It's hard to believe because we know that space is as relative as everything else. It does flow down a gravity well, which is why space has a curvature, which is why light can't escape a black hole despite nothing being able to outpace it. It's also why our current physics predict that once you cross the event horizon of a black hole, time and space swap roles, so "towards the singularity" isn't "ahead of you" but "in your future". Yeah, freaky.
Both Einstein and Newton say that any inertial frame of reference is indistinguishable from any other. Einstein simply adds an extra term to Newton's First Law to account for the geometry of space (see
this Veritasium video, between 9:55 and 11:10). From that point of view, the fact that the ship is accelerating (somehow!) doesn't negate its need to obey Einstein. From the ship's point of view, the total power of its impellers hasn't changed, so there's no reason why it should accelerate any more or any less than it would if it were at rest relative to the system primary. And because the speed of light hasn't changed (TANSTALÆ - There Ain't No Such Thing As Luminiferous Aether), Einstein still rules.
However, in the Honorverse, there are deviations from Einsteinian physics, not in the least that you can travel faster than light. Take, for example, the fact that translating down from alpha to normal space bleeds off 92% of your velocity and dissipates as energy. Simlarly, you can't translate up to hyper from normal space if your speed is over 0.3c.
Velocity measured on what frame of reference?
For those statements to be true, there needs to be a frame of reference that is more important than others. What it's at rest relative to isn't specified, but it must be very close to the star that projects the hyperlimit or the mean galactic speed. Though the closest thing we have to an Universe-wide frame of reference is that of the Cosmic Microwave Background. In any case, all of those are at worst a couple hundred km/s, which any cargo ship will exceed in under 5 minutes of acceleration anyway and doesn't represent more than 0.2% of light speed.
When we last discussed Relativity, in one of the first threads I created after joining, "
MDMs should last a little longer than they do," I speculated the same thing you're doing now. That the acceleration of the wedge is constant when measured against this frame of reference, not any other, including that of an observer sitting on the missile. The problem with that is that it leads to inconsistencies, such as the fact that from the missile's point of view, its third stage impeller burns out much more quickly than the first and second.
Conclusion: the math breaks down, here. Don't go past this line ("this far, no farther!" - Picard, Star Trek: First Contact). Just ignore the numbers, apply a fudge factor, and accept that RFC has done such an admirable job up until that line.
Then we can discuss what the rest of the 3 billion people do in the Manticore Binary System.