penny wrote:... in the HV I fully expect that turbulence is far more dangerous than it is on a planet. Not the same thing at all. But what is the same is the necessity of being forewarned. In the middle of a grav wave, if turbulence hits I do not know if there is any kind of warning. But one thing is for certain, the sails must be adjusted in some fashion. I would hazard a guess that trimming the sails is computer controlled. I wouldn't expect manual adjustment to be able to react fast enough. Therefore, I will still suggest that the sails are a set and forget matter, besides adjusting for speed and computer controlled trimming of the sails due to turbulence. There might be minor adjustments of the sails throughout the trip even in a normal grav wave; which I believe would also be accomplished under computer control.
I am positing an insanely powerful rogue grav wave that also appears to be very very random. But what is more dangerous is its inherent turbulence that is so severe that it is always fatal. It has the sort of turbulence that normal computers cannot adjust for because perhaps the sails cannot be trimmed in the fashion that need be.
Text implies that there are rogue waves that have caused destruction and as a result, certain waves are avoided. The MA loves a challenge. If all mere mortals are avoiding a grav wave, and the MA is not, then there might be areas of space that are inaccessible to mere mortals. Especially if these roguish rogue grav waves exist in an area of space that is a veritable freak rogue grav-wave storm.
That should have read 'I do not know how much of a warning there is of turbulence. Sensors in hyper are already limited, no? How well can sensors work in a grav wave, let alone in the midst of an even more powerful grav wave? So, realistically how much forewarning can there be?
Also, other than the author, who is to say that there isn't areas of hyperspace where rogue grav waves appear atop of rogue grav waves? Akin to a freak storm hitting a freak storm or several tornadoes touching down simultaneously in one city, etc. And who is to say that there are not areas in space where very frequent and random rogue grav waves appear simultaneously in each band? And if there needs to be enough forewarning of impending rogue grav waves and impending turbulence, what happens if an additional rogue grav wave or turbulence hits in the midst of a rogue grav wave where sensors should be even nore limited?
Again, and in summary, there may be areas in space where computers cannot presently trim for the rogue grav waves that occur because of their severity, randomness, energy level, low warning and possibly because the sails currently cannot be trimmed in the manner that need be; because of programming or the just plain impossibility of the sails to currently be reconfigured in the appropriate fashion required for mere navies other than those that have made unprecedented and unforeseen needed adjustments.
Tlb suggested that he does not think the author will share anything new about grav waves or rogue grav waves. I will hesitate to board that bus because sooner or later the author will have to give some explanation as to why Darius has not been found. Did David ever give a reason why Galton was not found without the Alignment's own error in Operational Security? At any rate, inaccessible regions of space might solve that problem as well.