LOG 3.1: The Launch Loop Talita: The launch loop is an active structure maglev cable transport system. The upper rail is held 80 kilometers above Dirtball's surface by the momentum of dozens of rotor belts that circulate through the structure. The circulation transfers the weight of the structure onto magnetic bearings at the grounded ends, which support it. Diagram of the end of the launch loop: 30 km wide rail loop radio dome berm wall surrounding rail loop magnetic bearings attached on each side of loop loop access rails ground access rail Talita: In total, it's about 2,700 kilometers long and 80 kilometers tall, and the support rail width is about 60 meters. Quite large! Diagram of a cross section of the launch loop rail: central maglev rail 2 maintenance cables and personnel maglev rails below main rail 7 active support stands support rails for stabilizing payload Diagram of a cross section of an active support strand: 5 rotors per strand Talita: This megastructure was created as an upfront investment by a Tiiliitian mining company, and it paid for itself in ease of exporting billions of tons of metals, rare gases, and heavy water. LOG 3.2: The Skyhook Orbital Tether Diagram: counterweight satellite body 600 km tether The hook, which may be swapped out to pick up different kinds of payloads. orbital direction (path around planet) spin direction (rotation of the entire structure) Attachment Process Diagram: payload accelerates on launch loop rail to the speed of the passing attachment point both traveling 3,800 m/s relative to surface "basket" grapple points extend from hook The RCS (reaction control system) positions baskets over “hitch” attachment points on the payload sled. basket tightens Diagram of Dirtball (aka Ixion III, Shikaviil III): Path of satellite body: a circular orbit around Dirtball Path of hook: A three-lobed path following around the path of the satellite body Talita: Incoming payloads give some of their kinetic energy to the skyhook, which slows them down enough to be safely transferred to the loop’s rail, and the skyhook uses that borrowed kinetic energy to fling outgoing payloads into higher orbit. Talita: The skyhook orbits Dirtball about every 2 hours, and the entire structure slowly spins as it does. The 600 kilometer tether extending from the satellite body passes 80 kilometers above the surface at 3 different points, most importantly over the rail of the launch loop. Payloads are put into support sleds with hitch spurs and are sent up the rail of the launch loop to accelerate up to 3,800 meters per second, the speed of the passing skyhook's attachment point. Idrisah: It's so scary. Talita: (visibly delighted) Everything in aerospace is!

Runaway to the Stars: Page 109 and 110

FULL SIZE IMAGE

Talita is very excited to explain to you how the local megastructures work!

Reminder to get your questions in for the character AMAs (submit questions here). As I said I will probably do AMA responses for 2 weeks because I am hoping to finish chapter 6 pages by the end of this year, and thus stay about 3 chapters ahead of the pages on this website. For now, at least. I have attempted to time the release of pages on here to be done around the same time I am done drawing the book, so it'll slowly catch up to me the entire time. This is fine, sometimes I need to light a fire under my ass to get work done.

Transcript

LOG 3.1: The Launch Loop

Talita: The launch loop is an active structure maglev cable transport system. The upper rail is held 80 kilometers above Dirtball's surface by the momentum of dozens of rotor belts that circulate through the structure. The circulation transfers the weight of the structure onto magnetic bearings at the grounded ends, which support it.

Diagram of the end of the launch loop:

  • 30 km wide rail loop

  • radio dome

  • berm wall surrounding rail loop

  • magnetic bearings attached on each side of loop

  • loop access rails

  • ground access rail

Talita: In total, it's about 2,700 kilometers long and 80 kilometers tall, and the support rail width is about 60 meters. Quite large!

Diagram of a cross section of the launch loop rail:

  • central maglev rail

  • 2 maintenance cables and personnel maglev rails below main rail

  • 7 active support stands

  • support rails for stabilizing payload

Diagram of a cross section of an active support strand:

  • 5 rotors per strand

Talita: This megastructure was created as an upfront investment by a Tiiliitian mining company, and it paid for itself in ease of exporting billions of tons of metals, rare gases, and heavy water.

LOG 3.2: The Skyhook

Orbital Tether

Diagram:

  • counterweight

  • satellite body

  • 600 km tether

  • The hook, which may be swapped out to pick up different kinds of payloads.

  • orbital direction (path around planet)

  • spin direction (rotation of the entire structure)

Attachment Process

Diagram:

  • payload accelerates on launch loop rail to the speed of the passing attachment point

  • both traveling 3,800 m/s relative to surface

  • "basket" grapple points extend from hook

  • The RCS (reaction control system) positions baskets over “hitch” attachment points on the payload sled.

  • basket tightens

Diagram of Dirtball (aka Ixion III, Shikaviil III):

  • Path of satellite body: a circular orbit around Dirtball

  • Path of hook: A three-lobed path following around the path of the satellite body

Talita: Incoming payloads give some of their kinetic energy to the skyhook, which slows them down enough to be safely transferred to the loop’s rail, and the skyhook uses that borrowed kinetic energy to fling outgoing payloads into higher orbit.

Talita: The skyhook orbits Dirtball about every 2 hours, and the entire structure slowly spins as it does. The 600 kilometer tether extending from the satellite body passes 80 kilometers above the surface at 3 different points, most importantly over the rail of the launch loop. Payloads are put into support sleds with hitch spurs and are sent up the rail of the launch loop to accelerate up to 3,800 meters per second, the speed of the passing skyhook's attachment point.

Idrisah: It's so scary.

Talita: (visibly delighted) Everything in aerospace is!

Runaway to the Stars: Page 109 and 110

FULL SIZE IMAGE

Talita is very excited to explain to you how the local megastructures work!

Reminder to get your questions in for the character AMAs (submit questions here). As I said I will probably do AMA responses for 2 weeks because I am hoping to finish chapter 6 pages by the end of this year, and thus stay about 3 chapters ahead of the pages on this website. For now, at least. I have attempted to time the release of pages on here to be done around the same time I am done drawing the book, so it'll slowly catch up to me the entire time. This is fine, sometimes I need to light a fire under my ass to get work done.

Transcript

LOG 3.1: The Launch Loop

Talita: The launch loop is an active structure maglev cable transport system. The upper rail is held 80 kilometers above Dirtball's surface by the momentum of dozens of rotor belts that circulate through the structure. The circulation transfers the weight of the structure onto magnetic bearings at the grounded ends, which support it.

Diagram of the end of the launch loop:

  • 30 km wide rail loop

  • radio dome

  • berm wall surrounding rail loop

  • magnetic bearings attached on each side of loop

  • loop access rails

  • ground access rail

Talita: In total, it's about 2,700 kilometers long and 80 kilometers tall, and the support rail width is about 60 meters. Quite large!

Diagram of a cross section of the launch loop rail:

  • central maglev rail

  • 2 maintenance cables and personnel maglev rails below main rail

  • 7 active support stands

  • support rails for stabilizing payload

Diagram of a cross section of an active support strand:

  • 5 rotors per strand

Talita: This megastructure was created as an upfront investment by a Tiiliitian mining company, and it paid for itself in ease of exporting billions of tons of metals, rare gases, and heavy water.

LOG 3.2: The Skyhook

Orbital Tether

Diagram:

  • counterweight

  • satellite body

  • 600 km tether

  • The hook, which may be swapped out to pick up different kinds of payloads.

  • orbital direction (path around planet)

  • spin direction (rotation of the entire structure)

Attachment Process

Diagram:

  • payload accelerates on launch loop rail to the speed of the passing attachment point

  • both traveling 3,800 m/s relative to surface

  • "basket" grapple points extend from hook

  • The RCS (reaction control system) positions baskets over “hitch” attachment points on the payload sled.

  • basket tightens

Diagram of Dirtball (aka Ixion III, Shikaviil III):

  • Path of satellite body: a circular orbit around Dirtball

  • Path of hook: A three-lobed path following around the path of the satellite body

Talita: Incoming payloads give some of their kinetic energy to the skyhook, which slows them down enough to be safely transferred to the loop’s rail, and the skyhook uses that borrowed kinetic energy to fling outgoing payloads into higher orbit.

Talita: The skyhook orbits Dirtball about every 2 hours, and the entire structure slowly spins as it does. The 600 kilometer tether extending from the satellite body passes 80 kilometers above the surface at 3 different points, most importantly over the rail of the launch loop. Payloads are put into support sleds with hitch spurs and are sent up the rail of the launch loop to accelerate up to 3,800 meters per second, the speed of the passing skyhook's attachment point.

Idrisah: It's so scary.

Talita: (visibly delighted) Everything in aerospace is!

7 thoughts on “Runaway to the Stars: Page 109 and 110

  1. Ive always been fascinated by the skyhook. Now I get to see it up close!!!!
    as a train nerd I think it’s especially cool seeing that even 300+ years in the future, we’re still using rails (modified and nearly unrecognizable) but rails nonetheless

  2. More excellent Talita faces

  3. I bet fear of skyhook transit is very commonplace, a la fear of air travel.

    Ive said this before but it seems relevant now.

  4. I remember seeing a video on how hypothetical sky hooks could work. Still cool to me, that it could happen in a relatively short amount of time from now.

    Also, Talita being a nerd my beloved :]*

  5. I love how Talita lights up when she’s talking about aerospace!

  6. Translunary_Animus

    I’m really glad we get a whole information page on the Skyhook and Launch Loop because honestly I think i’d be totally lost without it! It’s a very cool mechanism but i’m 100% not an engineer so the finer (and not so fine) portions of aerospace engineering tend to be lost on me.

  7. “It’s so scary!”

    Not scary enough to keep you off the planet whose only means of access it apparently is, Idrisah! 😉

    So the support structure under the Runaway is indeed one of the support sleds – but minus the hitch spurs that the skyhook would connect to.

    “(aka Ixion III, Shikaviil III)”

    Ah, so “Shikaviil”‘s the proper name given to the *sun*, not the planet?

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