'Lo!
I've been trying to work out some of the details of the ship in my novel, and in order to visualize it I've been visualizing the majestic Discovery One. The two ships are of similar size; both long and narrow, etc. (In fact, cut the Command Module off the Discovery and bolt on a luxury yacht; replace the AE35 with two great big whomping round fuel tanks and let the ends of the ship extend on 50m booms so it doesn't need to spin too fast to provide gravity, and you've pretty much got my ship. OK? Moving on...)
Anyway, I was thinking about the way Discovery was spinning when Leonov found her at Jupiter. (Still one of the most heart-stopping moments on the Big Screen IMO - it still rocks me every time I see it.)
Anyway, I was pouring a cuppa just now when I realized there was something odd about it and I thought I'd ask here.
In the book Clarke tells us that the reason the derelict is spinning is that over the years, the centrifuge - still running when Bowman left the ship - seized up; transferring its inertia to the Discovery's superstructure. But the thing that I find odd is this: The centrifuge was mounted laterally in the Command Module; horizontally across the module's widest point. When it seized, Discovery should have begun rolling, not pitching.
Granted, seeing Discovery spinning like an arrow in flight wouldn't have been very impressive visually, but that is what would have happened, right? Just curious.
Of course, I'm also thinking that the centrifuge was 65m forward of the ship's CoG, so is there some effect relating to precession that would have induced that violent pitch?
Ah - gotta go watch 2010 again; just to see that shot. :thumbup:
Thanks!
I've been trying to work out some of the details of the ship in my novel, and in order to visualize it I've been visualizing the majestic Discovery One. The two ships are of similar size; both long and narrow, etc. (In fact, cut the Command Module off the Discovery and bolt on a luxury yacht; replace the AE35 with two great big whomping round fuel tanks and let the ends of the ship extend on 50m booms so it doesn't need to spin too fast to provide gravity, and you've pretty much got my ship. OK? Moving on...)
Anyway, I was thinking about the way Discovery was spinning when Leonov found her at Jupiter. (Still one of the most heart-stopping moments on the Big Screen IMO - it still rocks me every time I see it.)
Anyway, I was pouring a cuppa just now when I realized there was something odd about it and I thought I'd ask here.
In the book Clarke tells us that the reason the derelict is spinning is that over the years, the centrifuge - still running when Bowman left the ship - seized up; transferring its inertia to the Discovery's superstructure. But the thing that I find odd is this: The centrifuge was mounted laterally in the Command Module; horizontally across the module's widest point. When it seized, Discovery should have begun rolling, not pitching.
Granted, seeing Discovery spinning like an arrow in flight wouldn't have been very impressive visually, but that is what would have happened, right? Just curious.
Of course, I'm also thinking that the centrifuge was 65m forward of the ship's CoG, so is there some effect relating to precession that would have induced that violent pitch?
Ah - gotta go watch 2010 again; just to see that shot. :thumbup:
Thanks!
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