what can I see?
Timothy Collinson
(18 Aug 2014 09:20 UTC)
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Re: [TML] what can I see?
Tim
(18 Aug 2014 14:22 UTC)
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Re: [TML] what can I see? Jeffrey Schwartz (18 Aug 2014 15:13 UTC)
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Re: [TML] what can I see?
Knapp
(18 Aug 2014 17:54 UTC)
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Re: [TML] what can I see?
Timothy Collinson
(19 Aug 2014 07:58 UTC)
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Re: [TML] what can I see?
Jeffrey Schwartz
(19 Aug 2014 13:35 UTC)
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Re: [TML] what can I see?
Timothy Collinson
(19 Aug 2014 17:05 UTC)
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Re: [TML] what can I see?
Timothy Collinson
(18 Aug 2014 20:55 UTC)
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Re: [TML] what can I see?
Tim
(19 Aug 2014 02:14 UTC)
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Re: [TML] what can I see?
Timothy Collinson
(19 Aug 2014 08:03 UTC)
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On Mon, Aug 18, 2014 at 10:22 AM, Tim <xxxxxx@little-possums.net> wrote: > The middle case is possibly the most interesting, with substantial > light and some heat during the primary's "night" for much of each > year. If the companion was about 10 times further out but 20 times as > luminous, it would contribute about 5% of the light and 20% of the > heat. That 5% light might not seem much in numbers, but indoor > lighting is usually less than 1% as bright as daylight, so it would be > much brighter than most artificial lighting. Likewise the 20% heat > influx would be enough to noticeably reduce heat loss during the > (primary) night or add to warming during the day. > > > One other thing to remember is that an F-class star puts out a fair > bit more energy into ultraviolet than our Sun does. UV-A in > particular would be more intense at the surface of an otherwise > Earth-like world, so beings not adapted to such flux would likely need > to avoid exposing unprotected skin and eyes for too long. > > > I hope this is a start towards some sort of help. Awesome Tim.. Had one thing pop into my head, imagining this place... https://answers.yahoo.com/question/index?qid=20071103192228AAGfyCD "If the chlorophyll is placed under a strong light, especially one with a lot of ultraviolet, it can look red due to a process called "fluorescence," which is the release of absorbed energy in the form of light. Chlorophyll fluoresces red light" In my imagining...... I'm looking out the window of the Type-S, kicked back and relaxing in the air conditioning. It's hot outside, and I can see the air rippling over the tarmac I'm parked on. The "S" is parked with the nose facing away from the star port, and out near the edge. There's berm around the 3 sides, but I can see the double fences of the landing area, and then the extraterritorial fence. In between is a grassy field, with a few flowers. Past that, the Sun is just over the horizon in the west, it's getting toward "night", but the "Soon" (Sun/moon) , the second star is about 35 degrees above the horizon. It's kinda like the days on Earth where you see the Sun and Moon at the same time, but you can't look at the Soon directly. The grassy field is green, with an odd yellowish tinge, and as I sit in the cockpit enjoying a cold drink, the grass gets progressively more golden and then begins to turn reddish, finally turning a glowing pinkish as only the Soon is up. There are a few bushes, here and there, and on the other side of the fence, perhaps 250 meters away, I can see more bushes and a few trees, mostly "pine-ish" The radio has been on in the background the whole time... or radios, I guess, since one is tuned to star port ground guard freq, and the other is on a local commercial station (FM 2330Mhz, WQMIX "The Mix") and the DJ takes a moment between songs to remind tourists that they need to be wary of the Soon's light, and to wear sunscreen in the evenings as well. She then queues up a song that reminds me a lot of Mike and the Mechanics "Par Avion", except it's being sung by a female Vargr. The Soon stays up another couple hours, during which time the planet's moon comes by in nearly the same arc. It's a large moon, and there's a partial eclipse for a couple kiloseconds or so. Nobody seems to really care, since it happens to one degree or another every night. During it, the light levels drop from a really bright full moon to a regular night. During the eclipse, though, a bunch of brightly colored flowers spring out from the bushes. I'm intrigued, and rouse myself enough to find a PRIS and sit on the edge of the airlock, enjoying the cooler night air as I look toward the plants. The PRIS amplifies the light enough and magnifies that I can clearly see the buds that haven't opened yet, and as I watch, some slowly unfold. Little rabbit-lizard-things come out from here and there - mostly from under the bushes. They're about 25-30cm long, lizardish skin that is covered with scales that seem to change color depending on the angle, ranging from a deep red to a pale green. They've got big ears that look like mushroom caps, one on each side of the head, and the eyes are on a small 'stalk' that come off the forehead and rises high enough to see over the caps. The eyes are close set together, and the thing hop/crawls on four legs that look like the back legs of a rabbit. I realize the close eyes giving stereoscopic vision is important as one suddenly springs up in to the air on a huge four-legged jump, and then a long (10cm) tongue lashes out, presumably catching some kind of flying insect feeding from one of the flowers. I do a quick walk around the "S" before calling it a night. Over on the port side, the umbilical is still attached. The fuel fill earlier chilled it, and ice formed, and now it's melting, leaving a small puddle of water on the tarmac with a drip-drip-drip from the icicles on the pipe. A small cloud of gnats (or suchlike) is flying around the liquid and ignoring the ice. I wonder where they came from, and if one of the lizard-bunnies is going to sneak through the fence to come after them. The ground rumbles a bit, and as I finish the walk around, I look up for a moment as a Free Trader climbs for the sky, then decide it's time for bed.