eliakon wrote:Like I said, its not a turbine, and is only vaguely like the described engine.
It's funny you should say that, because the extract I quoted very clearly and concisely states that it IS functioning as part of a jet turbine engine... of the turbofan type, to be specific. As described right there on page 31, the reactor effectively is the jet turbine engine's burner, with the reactor's waste heat being transferred to intake air to produce thrust. This is effectively the same tactic used in the thermonuclear reaction engines in Macross, as described in the previously cited publications.
eliakon wrote:And far FAR more importantly its fuel ratings, and thrust ratings are massively smaller.
The thrust ratings are, but remember that this is explicitly a scalable system and improvements in technology are expected to yield as much as fourfold improvement in efficiency. Such as it is, the projected 2.8lb of fuel per circumnavigation of the Earth as given both in Section 2.4.9 (page 34) and Section 2.5 (page 35) is nothing to sneeze at and wholly consistent with the OSM giving reaction engines an "effectively unlimited" sortie range in atmospheric service.
eliakon wrote:To get to the levels described in the show and OSM you are required to invoke handwave level improvements. Improvements that then take it off of "based on a theoretical device" to "technobabble that uses existing science for the buzzwords". At that point its sort of a stretch to claim that it is 'more realistic' than any other technobabble based non-realistic system.
Yes, there is some handwaving involved with respect to overtechnology... but that's not the point. The point is that the principles of the engine's operation are scientifically sound and that the kind of endurance cited in the RPG is a massive underrepresentation of a fusion engine's endurance even without that handwaving going on.
eliakon wrote:My assumption is that we have literally NOTHING to go on for the ease or efficiency of EITHER fuel. meaning that speculation on the relative merits of their production is quite literally simply dueling opinions as there are zero facts to support either stance.
We have multiple published papers to give us a fair indicator of how difficult it is to produce metallic hydrogen and slush hydrogen. These have both been cited already, and in the absence of a handwave to indicate that SLMH can be produced as easily as its more conventional cousins, we would have to accept that the data available thus far from research institutions indicates that producing a metallic hydrogen fuel in ANY quantities is going to be significantly more difficult than slush hydrogen simply because of the frankly colossal amount of energy that needs to be brought to bear. Are they both complex? Certainly. The difference is that the metallic option is orders of magnitude more difficult to make precisely because of the physics involved.
eliakon wrote:However since SLMH>HS if it were possible to make SLMH in our world it would also be being looked at as a fuel.
If, and only if, it were possible to produce SLMH in a fashion that was comparably economical to slush hydrogen or liquid hydrogen.
eliakon wrote:This is infact why MH is the subject of research, because it would make a great fuel, if we could just get it.
Can you cite a source for that? Because the only uses I've seen mentioned in connection with its experimental pursuit are as a high-temperature superconductor. Theoretically it could be used as a rocket fuel, but at present I'm not aware of anyone pursuing it for that reason because of the logistical impossibilities of making it.
eliakon wrote:Since the RT material establishes that they can make SLMH (unless we are going to claim that the canon RT material is wrong, [...]
Funnily enough, canon Robotech material makes no mention whatsoever of SLMH. The VF-1 Infopedia entries only say:
Robotech.com Infopedia VF-1 entry wrote:Powered by fusion engines, the VF-1 is fully space-capable, and is carried in great numbers on the SDF-1 as well as the Armor series of carriers.
From remarks I've seen copy-pasted from Jason Marker's facebook, SLMH was something he came up with in the absence of guidance from Harmony Gold on what the fusion engines used.
Archived convo from Jason Marker's facebook wrote:Amalgamated Fiction - Detroit: Yeah, except it's not. Not in the Macross part of the story anymore. Harmony Gold changed that, and now Protoculture isn't really A Thing until into the Southern Cross stuff. Do you think I just invented SLMH for the hell of it? To make a bunch of people mad? Because I get that **** /all/ the time from Robotech fans.
August 10, 2012 at 4:24pm
eliakon wrote:So short answer is "no there is nothing whatsoever to allow us to make any judgment on the relative merits of the production, or the required infrastructure."
Nothing except the known requirements for the formation of both substances as documented by credible research institutions... and that paints a picture that's rather unfavorable to metallic hydrogen.
eliakon wrote:I would also add that if the gravity systems that are used are found on spaceships.....then that would be a plausible reason for ship based SLMH production. I mean if you already have the gravity controls....
That's still operating on the baseless assumption that gravity control technology in the setting can reproduce the pressures needed to produce metallic hydrogen...
(If we were talking Macross, I could give it to you on the basis of VF engines catalyzing fusion via gravitational force as noted on the previously-cited technical documents... but in Robotech, we have no evidence to support the contention.)
eliakon wrote:I would also point out that we don't know the power needs of the gravity system, simply that they are found on spaceships with Reflex Furneces. There are light bulbs on those ships too, that does not mean that the light bulbs on the SDF-1 are special super power draining ones that can only be run off of Reflex Furnaces....
The RPG doesn't give fusion-powered spacecraft gravity control systems, which suggests that the technology is very energy-intensive as it can only be operated by reflex furnace-equipped craft.
eliakon wrote:I will check this out as well.
Happy reading, and may the eye-strain fairy forget to visit you after you're done... I cannot tell you the number of times I've slaved over a translation and had to knock off early with a headache because they print everything so bloody small.