NOTE:
CT allowed "void jumps" into 'empty' hexes as was described in the LBB adventure 'Twilight's Peak', occurring during the 3rd Frontier War.
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On Sat, 7/15/17, Jeff Zeitlin <xxxxxx@freelancetraveller.com> wrote:
Subject: [TML] Shipping Fuel Densely: Best way to do it?
To: "The Traveller Mailing List" <xxxxxx@simplelists.com>
Date: Saturday, July 15, 2017, 7:38 AM
Canonically, one can scoop unrefined fuel
from the atmosphere of a gas
giant, or dip it from the oceans of an
Earth-like world, and then
refine it for use in the jump drive and
power plant. This suggests
that the canonical refiners can break
down Damn Near Anything to get
the hydrogen out, and then compress and
cool the hydrogen into stored
refined fuel.
OK. I'm with that. I'll take a handwave
on the actual tech.
I'm willing to accept that a facility
that uses fuel will do so faster
than reasonable refining capacity can
provide it - that is, the
refiner can't feed the plant or j-drive
directly; you need the total
volume of refined fuel available when
you hit the 'go' button.
TNE allowed for "empty hex" jumps, to
'Calibration Points' -
essentially, deep-space stations. I
believe that the assumption was
that there was an icy body to provide
fuel there, large enough that
there was no need to discuss how they
were supplied.
Assume now that a deep-space station
_does_ need to have fuel
"trucked" in. The station has
sufficient tankage and sufficient
refining capacity to meet its needs as
a fueling station, plus it can
keep itself supplied with respect to
power plant needs. What's of
interest now is how to most efficiently
truck the fuel in.
A little browsing of Wikipedia says
that refined fuel - Liquid
Hydrogen, H2(l), has a density of
70kg/m3 - or, by definition of a
Traveller dton (displacement ton), 1
tonne per dton.
Question: (Please show your work!) What
substances can be transported
with an "effective refined fuel
density" (ERFD) that's higher than
H2(l), and what substance has the
highest ERFD? Also note if the
substance in question requires any
special handling (i.e., deviations
from STP) to achieve the stated ERFD.
(It's understood that by definition,
anything with a higher EFRD than
H2(l) is "unrefined" fuel. That's OK;
remember, it's being refined
on-site at the deep-space station.)
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