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Not getting the Surya

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Duke Rollo Duke Rollo's picture
Not getting the Surya
Some questions I have on the Surya morph... First, before we get into all the other questions... Why would anyone want to live this way? Sure, there's mesh inserts that you could use to entertain yourself, but it seems like the ONLY thing you're doing is surfing solar weather. That seems like it would be amazing at first... and then get kinda boring. Yes, I read that it's mostly cetacean uplifts that choose this morph, but I'm wondering why they wouldn't want morphs that are suited for Europa. I mean, gentle ocean currents seem a bit different from anything-goes-wrong-and-you're-dead solar winds. Second, I'm not getting how Surya's communicate. In the book in mentions that they can change the color of their skin to communicate. I'm thinking there needs to be mention of another implant that allows their eyes to filter out all that solar radiation WITHOUT also filtering out the visible light coming from their buddies. And how would they broadcast or receive any wireless signal? Wouldn't the sun's radiation muck it all up? Third, what happens when or if Surya want to fight? Culturally, I just don't see it happening. There has to be a way that they resolve conflict without coming to blows. In game terms, it seems like the Surya should have two states of being: health and VAPORIZED. If something disrupts their magnetic field in the sun's corona, that should be enough to vaporize anything not incredibly heat/radiation resistant. But how would they actually fight? Any metal projectile would likely vaporize as soon as it left the Surya's magnetic field. Same thing for a rail gun projectile. And if they can survive being in the sun, I doubt lasers or plasma are much of a worry. This leaves electronic attacks (which I'm not sure would be even possible given the radiation blocking radio communication) or just good old fashioned ramming... which strikes me as particularly suicidal/lethal for both attacker and victim. Finally... and please don't take this as me hating on you guys because I LOVE Eclipse Phase... I just don't feel like the Surya morph fits with the rest of the game. All the morphs that have been introduced are preeeeetty close to being human (or animal). Or robots that are about as resilient as humans (give or take). There isn't, for example, a morph that can survive re-entry into an atmosphere. There isn't a morph that can escape the gravity of an earth-sized planet under it's own power. There isn't a morph that can crush coal into diamonds. But suddenly there IS a morph that can hang out in the sun??? It feels out of place in your game... or like it should be like the Meat-hab... where there's just one that was made as a curiosity. How would a game master work a Surya morph into a game of regular biomorphs? What would an all-Surya campaign be? What would the players do? Food for thought.
-Duke Rollo
TBRMInsanity TBRMInsanity's picture
Re: Not getting the Surya
Duke Rollo wrote:
Some questions I have on the Surya morph... First, before we get into all the other questions... Why would anyone want to live this way? Sure, there's mesh inserts that you could use to entertain yourself, but it seems like the ONLY thing you're doing is surfing solar weather. That seems like it would be amazing at first... and then get kinda boring. Yes, I read that it's mostly cetacean uplifts that choose this morph, but I'm wondering why they wouldn't want morphs that are suited for Europa. I mean, gentle ocean currents seem a bit different from anything-goes-wrong-and-you're-dead solar winds. Second, I'm not getting how Surya's communicate. In the book in mentions that they can change the color of their skin to communicate. I'm thinking there needs to be mention of another implant that allows their eyes to filter out all that solar radiation WITHOUT also filtering out the visible light coming from their buddies. And how would they broadcast or receive any wireless signal? Wouldn't the sun's radiation muck it all up? Third, what happens when or if Surya want to fight? Culturally, I just don't see it happening. There has to be a way that they resolve conflict without coming to blows. In game terms, it seems like the Surya should have two states of being: health and VAPORIZED. If something disrupts their magnetic field in the sun's corona, that should be enough to vaporize anything not incredibly heat/radiation resistant. But how would they actually fight? Any metal projectile would likely vaporize as soon as it left the Surya's magnetic field. Same thing for a rail gun projectile. And if they can survive being in the sun, I doubt lasers or plasma are much of a worry. This leaves electronic attacks (which I'm not sure would be even possible given the radiation blocking radio communication) or just good old fashioned ramming... which strikes me as particularly suicidal/lethal for both attacker and victim. Finally... and please don't take this as me hating on you guys because I LOVE Eclipse Phase... I just don't feel like the Surya morph fits with the rest of the game. All the morphs that have been introduced are preeeeetty close to being human (or animal). Or robots that are about as resilient as humans (give or take). There isn't, for example, a morph that can survive re-entry into an atmosphere. There isn't a morph that can escape the gravity of an earth-sized planet under it's own power. There isn't a morph that can crush coal into diamonds. But suddenly there IS a morph that can hang out in the sun??? It feels out of place in your game... or like it should be like the Meat-hab... where there's just one that was made as a curiosity. How would a game master work a Surya morph into a game of regular biomorphs? What would an all-Surya campaign be? What would the players do? Food for thought.
Yes I agree with you that the Surya seems to be more LCF (Look cool factor) then functional. The only counter arguments have have in favour for Surya existences are: * The Sun is the best source of fundamental elements in the Solar System and as such there needs to be a way to "mine" these elements so they can be used by the rest of transhumanity (enter the Surya, and a lot of handwavium to make it work). * While Europa has a lot of water, the habitable (for Cetaceans) is relatively close to the habs and it doesn'ts give a whale a lot of room to roam (like they have in Earth's oceans). Life as a Surya gives you a much larger "ocean" to live in which may be more appealing to Cetaceans. This points is also why I think a lot of long haul freighter pilots are also Cetaceans. These points aside I do agree that if Suryas are possible then other morphs should be possible, such as biomorphs that can live in space (something that I'm totally against by the way, I think only Synths should be able to exist in the vacuum of space, or in the corona of the sun). As resilient as biology is, there are some extremes they can never survive, and this barrier is always crossed by science fiction writers (either on purpose or by accident). I think that the rule should be, when in doubt EP should have used Synths instead of Biomorphs.
Jovian Motto: Your mind is original. Preserve it. Your body is a temple. Maintain it. Immortality is an illusion. Forget it.
Decivre Decivre's picture
Re: Not getting the Surya
Out of curiosity, what actual functions do other bodies have? Do our bodies produce diamonds? Do birds crap fossil fuels? Functionally, any and all organisms have one primary function: survival. Whether by hardiness intelligence or a ludicrous capability for procreation, organisms are simply designed to keep on keeping on. In the case of suryas, they are functionally adapted to survive in the most inhospitable habitat in existence, but also probably the place that could house the most inhabitants... the sun. As for an all-surya campaign, I could see some possibilities. TITANs may have the means to put their technology on the sun, and suryas would be the most able to explore that. Also, hackers may have surya bodies, so virtually every opportunity out there for hackers is also open to suryas, in the same way it is open to infomorphs.
Transhumans will one day be the Luddites of the posthuman age. [url=http://bit.ly/2p3wk7c]Help me get my gaming fix, if you want.[/url]
Duke Rollo Duke Rollo's picture
Re: Not getting the Surya
Let me refocus the discussion on what I think is the most relevant part: How can the Suryas be immune to the sun's blinding brilliance AND be able to see one another change color? I'm willing to believe there's a way, but I'm just not seeing it yet. Consider this. When I was in high school, I saw a partial solar eclipse. The moon came in front of the sun, but in a position where it didn't fully blot it out. So during the middle of the eclipse, it looked like the sun usually looks with a big black dot in the middle. You couldn't look directly at it because there was enough sun showing around the moon that it would injure your eyes. So our school science department gave each student a small plastic filter. You could hold the filter up to your eyes and see a glowing dot if you looked at the sun (or a glowing ring during the eclipse). NOTHING else came through the film. Car headlights. Halogen lamps. Nothing. So... wouldn't the Surya's magnetic field work similarly? As a filter? If so, I just don't get how they'd ever see other surya as anything more than a TIIIIIIIINY dot in front of the sun. How would they ever see the color changes? It just seems like we have this romantic idea of the sun as a fiery mass with black space around it. The reality is the sun is an incandescent white inferno. Like I said, I'm willing to believe there is a way for suryas to see... but I'm just not seeing it yet.
-Duke Rollo
Decivre Decivre's picture
Re: Not getting the Surya
Duke Rollo wrote:
Let me refocus the discussion on what I think is the most relevant part: How can the Suryas be immune to the sun's blinding brilliance AND be able to see one another change color? I'm willing to believe there's a way, but I'm just not seeing it yet. Consider this. When I was in high school, I saw a partial solar eclipse. The moon came in front of the sun, but in a position where it didn't fully blot it out. So during the middle of the eclipse, it looked like the sun usually looks with a big black dot in the middle. You couldn't look directly at it because there was enough sun showing around the moon that it would injure your eyes. So our school science department gave each student a small plastic filter. You could hold the filter up to your eyes and see a glowing dot if you looked at the sun (or a glowing ring during the eclipse). NOTHING else came through the film. Car headlights. Halogen lamps. Nothing. So... wouldn't the Surya's magnetic field work similarly? As a filter? If so, I just don't get how they'd ever see other surya as anything more than a TIIIIIIIINY dot in front of the sun. How would they ever see the color changes? It just seems like we have this romantic idea of the sun as a fiery mass with black space around it. The reality is the sun is an incandescent white inferno. Like I said, I'm willing to believe there is a way for suryas to see... but I'm just not seeing it yet.
Actually, surya visual communication seems to use rather binary means of transferring language, relying on patterns of light and dark shifting to send the message. It is effectively akin to morse code, and would be relatively easy to do even within the confines of the sun. Their more common form of communication is through song, for which their proficient ability to hear ultrasonic vibrations is best for. Also, remember that you cannot use your own experiences necessarily to discern the experiences of a being in a different body. It'd be like me saying "I jump in water and can't breathe, so fish can't breathe in water either!" The photoreceptive organs of a surya likely work vastly different from those within the human eye, and it would be difficult to even try to get a grasp on how it works. It's akin to how I can't even begin to understand how a bloodhound is able to discern individual scents, or how they can tell everything about another creature they smell from whether they have a disease to what part of their menstrual cycle they are in. It's an amazing function, for which us humans have no analog.
Transhumans will one day be the Luddites of the posthuman age. [url=http://bit.ly/2p3wk7c]Help me get my gaming fix, if you want.[/url]
TBRMInsanity TBRMInsanity's picture
Re: Not getting the Surya
Decivre wrote:
Actually, surya visual communication seems to use rather binary means of transferring language, relying on patterns of light and dark shifting to send the message. It is effectively akin to morse code, and would be relatively easy to do even within the confines of the sun. Their more common form of communication is through song, for which their proficient ability to hear ultrasonic vibrations is best for. Also, remember that you cannot use your own experiences necessarily to discern the experiences of a being in a different body. It'd be like me saying "I jump in water and can't breathe, so fish can't breathe in water either!" The photoreceptive organs of a surya likely work vastly different from those within the human eye, and it would be difficult to even try to get a grasp on how it works. It's akin to how I can't even begin to understand how a bloodhound is able to discern individual scents, or how they can tell everything about another creature they smell from whether they have a disease to what part of their menstrual cycle they are in. It's an amazing function, for which us humans have no analog.
If you want to argue along those ideas, you can take the squid as an example. There are species of squid that use visual queues to communicate, even though their eye sight is quite limited (when compared to human eye sight). It all comes down to it you know what your looking for (ie your eyes are designed to pick out the visual communication queues). I would say the Suryas are not possible for many other reasons (extreme heat, lack of oxygen, lack of protection from radiation, lack of food supply, etc). Some of these reasons there have been handwavium used to explain them, but I think it would have been a lot better if the Suryas were originally Synths instead of biomorphs (then most of the handwavium becomes more believable).
Jovian Motto: Your mind is original. Preserve it. Your body is a temple. Maintain it. Immortality is an illusion. Forget it.
Decivre Decivre's picture
Re: Not getting the Surya
TBRMInsanity wrote:
If you want to argue along those ideas, you can take the squid as an example. There are species of squid that use visual queues to communicate, even though their eye sight is quite limited (when compared to human eye sight). It all comes down to it you know what your looking for (ie your eyes are designed to pick out the visual communication queues). I would say the Suryas are not possible for many other reasons (extreme heat, lack of oxygen, lack of protection from radiation, lack of food supply, etc). Some of these reasons there have been handwavium used to explain them, but I think it would have been a lot better if the Suryas were originally Synths instead of biomorphs (then most of the handwavium becomes more believable).
Actually, they've gone a long way to explaining how suryas are able to survive on the corona of the sun. A combination of their self-generated magnetosphere, radiovorous metabolism (solarians metabolize solar radiation) and medichine technology (their bodies are effectively repairing radiation damage at all times) go a long way to allowing them to survive there. It isn't plausible within the context of technology today, but we know that these sorts of technologies are feasible... even if we don't know whether it would be possible to create this organism.
Transhumans will one day be the Luddites of the posthuman age. [url=http://bit.ly/2p3wk7c]Help me get my gaming fix, if you want.[/url]
Duke Rollo Duke Rollo's picture
Re: Not getting the Surya
Let me ask a different way. Please explain to me the technology that blocks out light AND doesn't block out light. This isn't me saying "I can't do it so no one can". I'm saying they've developed technology to block out radiation including visual light from the sun AND their communication is based on visual light??? That doesn't make any sense. I'm just trying to make sense of it.
-Duke Rollo
Thunderwave Thunderwave's picture
Re: Not getting the Surya
Duke Rollo wrote:
Let me ask a different way. Please explain to me the technology that blocks out light AND doesn't block out light. This isn't me saying "I can't do it so no one can". I'm saying they've developed technology to block out radiation including visual light from the sun AND their communication is based on visual light??? That doesn't make any sense. I'm just trying to make sense of it.
It's a Whale, right? With eyes on the sides of it's head? It keeps one eye aimed at deep space and away from the sun.
TBRMInsanity TBRMInsanity's picture
Re: Not getting the Surya
Decivre wrote:
Actually, they've gone a long way to explaining how suryas are able to survive on the corona of the sun. A combination of their self-generated magnetosphere, radiovorous metabolism (solarians metabolize solar radiation) and medichine technology (their bodies are effectively repairing radiation damage at all times) go a long way to allowing them to survive there. It isn't plausible within the context of technology today, but we know that these sorts of technologies are feasible... even if we don't know whether it would be possible to create this organism.
Mostly it is handwavium (which is fine I guess) but I think it would have been more feasible to make the Surya a synthmorph and say that they are using a combination of a Leidenfrost effect and nanotechnology without worrying about biological needs.
Jovian Motto: Your mind is original. Preserve it. Your body is a temple. Maintain it. Immortality is an illusion. Forget it.
Decivre Decivre's picture
Re: Not getting the Surya
Duke Rollo wrote:
Let me ask a different way. Please explain to me the technology that blocks out light AND doesn't block out light. This isn't me saying "I can't do it so no one can". I'm saying they've developed technology to block out radiation including visual light from the sun AND their communication is based on visual light??? That doesn't make any sense. I'm just trying to make sense of it.
Why would they need the ability to block out visual light? Visual light does not actually damage the eyes, and that also includes during a nuclear blast. The blinding whiteness causes your pupils to rapidly dilate, but does not do any damage. It is a combination of the ultraviolet light emitted during a nuclear blast (it is known as Photokeratitis) and the radiated thermal energy of the blast that does damage. The real question is how suryas deal with heat and ultraviolet radiation. Chances are that their bodies are tolerant of higher levels of heat than we are. This obviously reduces the problems inherent with the heat of the sun (at least on the corona), and makes them capable of surviving at such a place. The ultraviolet radiation is probably handled differently. The suryas' skin seems to be designed to absorb and metabolize ultraviolet rays. While their eyes may be damaged by them (just as with every other part of their bodies) their medichines are designed to mitigate that by repairing their bodies on a constant basis, including their eyes... and are probably fueled by the same ultraviolet light that is doing this damage.
Transhumans will one day be the Luddites of the posthuman age. [url=http://bit.ly/2p3wk7c]Help me get my gaming fix, if you want.[/url]
Decivre Decivre's picture
Re: Not getting the Surya
TBRMInsanity wrote:
Mostly it is handwavium (which is fine I guess) but I think it would have been more feasible to make the Surya a synthmorph and say that they are using a combination of a Leidenfrost effect and nanotechnology without worrying about biological needs.
I don't see how it is handwavium. Perhaps they handwave how the technology progressed so far (to which point virtually all of Eclipse Phase is handwaved; we don't know yet if nanotechnology can become as advanced as it is shown in the setting), but the individual aspects of the surya do actually exist in real life. There are organisms that are radiovores (digest radiation), natural processes which generate magnetic fields, and theoretical nanomachines. The only real question is whether they could ever achieve what they do in unison, as the surya represents it... but again, this is something we could ask about everything in Eclipse Phase.
Transhumans will one day be the Luddites of the posthuman age. [url=http://bit.ly/2p3wk7c]Help me get my gaming fix, if you want.[/url]
TBRMInsanity TBRMInsanity's picture
Re: Not getting the Surya
Decivre wrote:
I don't see how it is handwavium. Perhaps they handwave how the technology progressed so far (to which point virtually all of Eclipse Phase is handwaved; we don't know yet if nanotechnology can become as advanced as it is shown in the setting), but the individual aspects of the surya do actually exist in real life. There are organisms that are radiovores (digest radiation), natural processes which generate magnetic fields, and theoretical nanomachines. The only real question is whether they could ever achieve what they do in unison, as the surya represents it... but again, this is something we could ask about everything in Eclipse Phase.
You do have a point, and I guess my only point was it would be easier (from a EP tech level point of view) to have the Surya as a synth instead of a biomorph. But I guess I missed the point in human nature that says, if something is possible, then transhumanity will find a way to make it happen.
Jovian Motto: Your mind is original. Preserve it. Your body is a temple. Maintain it. Immortality is an illusion. Forget it.
CodeBreaker CodeBreaker's picture
Re: Not getting the Surya
TBRMInsanity wrote:
You do have a point, and I guess my only point was it would be easier (from a EP tech level point of view) to have the Surya as a synth instead of a biomorph. But I guess I missed the point in human nature that says, if something is possible, then transhumanity will find a way to make it happen.
The decision to make it a BioMorph could also be influenced by the general biochauvinism that is present in the inner system. Synths have certain connotations attached to them. Cheap, worker, soldier type connotations. If you have the resources to sleeve yourself in a sun dwelling space mammal you don't want to look cheap.
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Duke Rollo Duke Rollo's picture
Re: Not getting the Surya
@Decivre... You asked, "Why would they need the ability to block out visual light?" Have you SEEN the sun? It's bright. It's so very bright. It's the brightest object in the sky. Have you ever looked at a halogen lamp? It's brighter. So let's assume that you're right and it doesn't damage their eyes (which it should. Visual light will burn out your corneas no problemo... ). My beef is that everything in Eclipse Phase makes a sort of sense except the Suryas. Nothing else asks me to believe something that's both X and not-X, you know? Everything makes a sort of sense based on what we know. The Surya is the first time the authors are asking me to believe that light doesn't behave like light... that something in the sun can block out all the solar radiation AND somehow let through the comparatively tiny amount of light from the other suryas. It's like me telling you, "When you go to this super loud rock concert, I have these ear plugs that will block out ALL the noise, but you'll be able to hear people whispering 100 feet away through all the shouting fans." There's a way for it to happen using sound filtering... but the book doesn't talk about filtering. It just assumes that SOMETHING happens to let space whales chat each other up with visual light in a maelstrom of visual light. So.... AGAIN... I'm willing to believe it's possible. I just need an answer that isn't handwavium.
-Duke Rollo
Decivre Decivre's picture
Re: Not getting the Surya
Duke Rollo wrote:
@Decivre... You asked, "Why would they need the ability to block out visual light?" Have you SEEN the sun? It's bright. It's so very bright. It's the brightest object in the sky. Have you ever looked at a halogen lamp? It's brighter. So let's assume that you're right and it doesn't damage their eyes (which it should. Visual light will burn out your corneas no problemo... ). My beef is that everything in Eclipse Phase makes a sort of sense except the Suryas. Nothing else asks me to believe something that's both X and not-X, you know? Everything makes a sort of sense based on what we know. The Surya is the first time the authors are asking me to believe that light doesn't behave like light... that something in the sun can block out all the solar radiation AND somehow let through the comparatively tiny amount of light from the other suryas. It's like me telling you, "When you go to this super loud rock concert, I have these ear plugs that will block out ALL the noise, but you'll be able to hear people whispering 100 feet away through all the shouting fans." There's a way for it to happen using sound filtering... but the book doesn't talk about filtering. It just assumes that SOMETHING happens to let space whales chat each other up with visual light in a maelstrom of visual light. So.... AGAIN... I'm willing to believe it's possible. I just need an answer that isn't handwavium.
Again, light itself does nothing to your eyes. Thermal energy is what screws up your eyes, which halogen lights, the sun, and virtually every light source produces on a secondary level. However, surya body cells are not going to be structured the same way as our cells are, and are likely more vastly more tolerant to heat than ours is. As a simpler example of this on Earth, clostridium botulinum can survive within water at boiling temperatures whereas human skin begins to burn at far lower temperatures (about 130 degrees fahrenheit). Suryas take this to an exotic level, likely using certain rare earth minerals to increase the curability of their own cell structures (boron, perhaps). That said, whether this comes off as "handwavium" really depends on what your definition of handwavium is. If your definition of handwavium is "everything that isn't possible with today's technology", then virtually all science fiction except perhaps [url=http://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/Main/NextSundayAD]speculative sci-fi taking place only a short time from now with technology currently being tested[/url] would qualify as handwavium... and nearly everything in Eclipse Phase would qualify as well.
Transhumans will one day be the Luddites of the posthuman age. [url=http://bit.ly/2p3wk7c]Help me get my gaming fix, if you want.[/url]
Eleazar Eleazar's picture
Re: Not getting the Surya
Presumably sunglasses can be bioengineered. A surya might be blind from lack of light farther away from the sun, but it can't live there anyway. Hmmm... All I try to do to visualize how a surya communication scheme might play out on the sun is to think of the silhoutte of a surya against the corona. To my mind, if you get close enough, the sheer bulk of the surya body is going to shade the eye of the receiver (of the communication). The visual communication of suryas probably resembles a dance, as one spirals lower than the other (towards the corona), flashes a message, and then the other surya spirals around to deliver a reply. Really though, if their eyes block out a large enough proportion of the light, they should be able to see just fine while looking right at the sun. The weirdest stuff for me with the sun morphs is the stuff with surfing on magnetic field lines and all that. I don't know enough about the physics of it to accept that they're able to counteract the sun's enourmous gravity just doing that, but since Eclipse Phase is a "mostly" sciency-scifi setting, I can accept a large amount of magical tech.
Duke Rollo Duke Rollo's picture
Re: Not getting the Surya
Let's try an experiment. Find a super bright halogen lamp that's super bright and with a bulb so big that it takes up your entire field of vision (the sun). Then put on a welding mask (surya eyes/solar protection)). Then stare into the halogen light and try to see the blinking light from a firefly (surya communicating) flying between you and the light source as more than just a tiny black dot . The only way I can think of to do this is to have a high powered computer control the filter in the welding mask to not filter the tiny dot that is the firefly. This also strikes me as particularly dangerous. If the filter screws up at all and lets the halogen light in then you're going to end up with a brilliant white light/blind spot in your field of vision. And if it's solar radiation and you screw up that way you'd likely fry yourself. I'm fine with there being some cool filtering technology that lets suryas do this. But that isn't what people are saying to me. You're saying that it just happens. Which isn't how the rest of EP is written. How ever Suryas are able to see one another as more than just specks of darkness against the backdrop of the sun, EXPLAIN THAT. At least a little. Don't just tell me that's how they do it. That's like saying "People just go from places like Venus to places like Mars in a couple hours" without explaining egocasting.
-Duke Rollo
KarmaInferno KarmaInferno's picture
Re: Not getting the Surya
Decivre wrote:
Again, light itself does nothing to your eyes. Thermal energy is what screws up your eyes, which halogen lights, the sun, and virtually every light source produces on a secondary level.
That's not... quite correct. Intense light can cause bleaching of the rods in your eye, potentially inducing visual artifacts and possible blindness. Additionally, the light energy itself of the sun delivers about 4 milliwatts of power to the eyes of someone on Earth looking directly up at the sun. This is aside from any direct thermal transmission the Sun puts out. If you're only looking for a short time this can be painful but not harmful, but extended viewing can cause internal heating of the retina due to that light energy, which can have longer term or even permanent effects. All this can be GREATLY aggravated whenever you have a combination of sun and shade, like during a solar eclipse. The pupil of the eye responds to overall light, not the intensity of light. So during an eclipse when much of the Sun's surface is blocked, your pupils dilate. But the still-visible parts of the sun still have the same intensity of light output, which means if you're looking directly at the Sun during an eclipse you could be getting as much as ten times as much exposure to your retinas as normal. This can cause damage in minutes - and often you won't even feel pain. -karma
KarmaInferno KarmaInferno's picture
Re: Not getting the Surya
Duke Rollo wrote:
I'm fine with there being some cool filtering technology that lets suryas do this. But that isn't what people are saying to me. You're saying that it just happens. Which isn't how the rest of EP is written. How ever Suryas are able to see one another as more than just specks of darkness against the backdrop of the sun, EXPLAIN THAT. At least a little. Don't just tell me that's how they do it. That's like saying "People just go from places like Venus to places like Mars in a couple hours" without explaining egocasting.
What could be happening is that the Surya might broadcast at specific wavelengths not especially present in solar light. Then the filters could be designed to allow more of those specific wavelengths through, but block 99% of all other wavelengths. -karma
Eleazar Eleazar's picture
Re: Not getting the Surya
Duke Rollo wrote:
Let's try an experiment. Find a super bright halogen lamp that's super bright and with a bulb so big that it takes up your entire field of vision (the sun). Then put on a welding mask (surya eyes/solar protection)). Then stare into the halogen light and try to see the blinking light from a firefly (surya communicating) flying between you and the light source as more than just a tiny black dot .
So in that example, you don't silhoutte the surya, because you have adequate eye protection. Instead you'd have the surya's communication being lit up by the sun. I feel like you're thinking that since only a little light (of the total sun output) is getting through, that the remainder is no longer reflecting off of objects. The whole reason that just filtering the bulk of the light intensity (a la a welder's mask or sunglasses) works in this case is that the light is intense everywhere around you on the sun, so everything is reflecting back that intensity. On Earth, you have a great difference between ambient light and the intensity of the sun, which prevents you from putting on sunglasses that can filter the sun down to comfortable levels and still see anything else. On the Sun, the ambient light is universally high intensity, so filtering the sun down to comfortable levels still allows you to see. Also, I don't know why you're assigning such a vast distance between the viewer and the messenger. That doesn't make sense for any form of natural communication. This goes into my own suspension of disbelief, which wonders how magnetic field surfing can be so precise as to allow close formation flying.
CodeBreaker CodeBreaker's picture
Re: Not getting the Surya
Eleazar wrote:
Also, I don't know why you're assigning such a vast distance between the viewer and the messenger. That doesn't make sense for any form of natural communication. This goes into my own suspension of disbelief, which wonders how magnetic field surfing can be so precise as to allow close formation flying.
I imagine pattern flashing to be a fairly intimate method of communication, the equivalent of whispering. The distances that must be involved almost make that a certainty. For anything farther away than a few lengths of their own bodies I imagine it is more efficient to use either sound or mesh use, but then even mesh use becomes difficult when you are sitting in one of the solar systems biggest white noise generators.
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TBRMInsanity TBRMInsanity's picture
Re: Not getting the Surya
Quick question for any astrophysicist out there, what is the wave spectrum used by the Sun, and is there a portion of the wave spectrum (obviously not the visual part) that isn't utilized that can be used by the Suryas for communication (say the HF, VHF, or UHF portions)?
Jovian Motto: Your mind is original. Preserve it. Your body is a temple. Maintain it. Immortality is an illusion. Forget it.
KarmaInferno KarmaInferno's picture
Re: Not getting the Surya
Found this online at the Lawrence Berkeley website: [img]http://www.lbl.gov/Science-Articles/Archive/sb/Aug-2004/reflectance_wave... I see a couple of wavelength gaps there. -karma
Decivre Decivre's picture
Re: Not getting the Surya
Duke Rollo wrote:
Let's try an experiment. Find a super bright halogen lamp that's super bright and with a bulb so big that it takes up your entire field of vision (the sun). Then put on a welding mask (surya eyes/solar protection)). Then stare into the halogen light and try to see the blinking light from a firefly (surya communicating) flying between you and the light source as more than just a tiny black dot . The only way I can think of to do this is to have a high powered computer control the filter in the welding mask to not filter the tiny dot that is the firefly. This also strikes me as particularly dangerous. If the filter screws up at all and lets the halogen light in then you're going to end up with a brilliant white light/blind spot in your field of vision. And if it's solar radiation and you screw up that way you'd likely fry yourself. I'm fine with there being some cool filtering technology that lets suryas do this. But that isn't what people are saying to me. You're saying that it just happens. Which isn't how the rest of EP is written. How ever Suryas are able to see one another as more than just specks of darkness against the backdrop of the sun, EXPLAIN THAT. At least a little. Don't just tell me that's how they do it. That's like saying "People just go from places like Venus to places like Mars in a couple hours" without explaining egocasting.
Okay, let's try another experiment. Smell someone's sock, then track them for miles with just that scent. Not really that possible for you, hmm? Try going to the local airport and sniffing out who has drugs plastic-wrapped within their luggage. Also too hard? Let's move on to another sensory organ. Close your eyes, snap your fingers, and try to see the walls with your ears. How about using the earth's magnetic field to know which way to go without needing your eyes? These may seem like things that cannot exist, but creatures within the animal kingdom are fully capable of doing these things. In this sense it would be hard to describe how a surya's eyes are able to discern individual light sources in the depths of the sun. It would be as hard as describing how a bloodhound is able to discern different smells in a room full of them, or how a bat can "see" walls with its ears. It's akin to describing color to the blind, or music to the deaf.
KarmaInferno wrote:
That's not... quite correct. Intense light can cause bleaching of the rods in your eye, potentially inducing visual artifacts and possible blindness. Additionally, the light energy itself of the sun delivers about 4 milliwatts of power to the eyes of someone on Earth looking directly up at the sun. This is aside from any direct thermal transmission the Sun puts out. If you're only looking for a short time this can be painful but not harmful, but extended viewing can cause internal heating of the retina due to that light energy, which can have longer term or even permanent effects. All this can be GREATLY aggravated whenever you have a combination of sun and shade, like during a solar eclipse. The pupil of the eye responds to overall light, not the intensity of light. So during an eclipse when much of the Sun's surface is blocked, your pupils dilate. But the still-visible parts of the sun still have the same intensity of light output, which means if you're looking directly at the Sun during an eclipse you could be getting as much as ten times as much exposure to your retinas as normal. This can cause damage in minutes - and often you won't even feel pain. -karma
Flash blindness has never been proven to cause permanent blindness. Most studies have shown that while the retinal pigments become bleached with exposure to bright light, they also heal from this bleaching in all known cases. The only situations in which light exposure causes permanent blindness are ones where vast amounts of thermal and ultraviolet radiation are also present, and since the other two definitely cause blindness no one has ever been able to discern whether light can as well. That said, all situations where heat and ultraviolet light are not factors have not yielded people who were permanently blinded. While I do agree that looking at the sun during an eclipse will cause damage quickly that often doesn't cause pain, this is also true with sunburns in other parts of the body... you usually don't feel pain until long after. Eyes get damaged faster by the sun because our eyes are more sensitive, and the ultraviolet light and thermal radiation affect them far quicker.
Transhumans will one day be the Luddites of the posthuman age. [url=http://bit.ly/2p3wk7c]Help me get my gaming fix, if you want.[/url]
Quincey Forder Quincey Forder's picture
Re: Not getting the Surya
That brings a question to my mind how far can a Surya venture from the sun? could it reach Mercury's orbit?
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Duke Rollo Duke Rollo's picture
Re: Not getting the Surya
@Decivre Sir, kindly divorce yourself from the idea that my argument is "I can't do it so it can't be done". That not what I'm arguing and you insisting it is (with your smelling example) only serves to frustrate both of us. I'm not here to frustrate you, nor am I going to entertain any more "tellings off". Instead, kindly address what I've put forward: that the science behind everything in Eclipse Phase is based in the reality of near-future technology and requires a minimal suspension of disbelief. For farcasting I don't have to re-define how radio waves travel. For habitats, I don't have to change the rules of how architecture works. For uplifts, no one is telling me that they're 100% biomorphs AND have robotic parts. Everything makes sense. EXCEPT for the Suryas which demand that we believe (without any real explanation as to how) that they can both filter the harmful light of the sun AND AT THE SAME TIME not filter out light coming from their friends. Just tell me how they can do this and I'll be happy. The more I think about suryas the less sense they make. If they can survive in the sun, then why isn't there a device or implant that a biomorph can use to deal with energy weapons? If we can build a magnetic field that can withstand THE SUN then why aren't there shields that block lasers or plasma? If it requires a tremendous amount of energy then why not have it activate only when needed? For a few nano-seconds or the like? If it's too large a device then why isn't it vehicle mounted? Just not something I'd have in my game as they're written. In the overall flow of EP, they feel like a speed bump. "Everything is pretty awesome and has a realism to it except the SOLAR SPACE WHALES that have shields that no one else can have and can magically communicate using visible light even when they're filtering out all the visible light of the sun..." Bad form overall.
-Duke Rollo
CodeBreaker CodeBreaker's picture
Re: Not getting the Surya
Duke Rollo wrote:
The more I think about suryas the less sense they make. If they can survive in the sun, then why isn't there a device or implant that a biomorph can use to deal with energy weapons? If we can build a magnetic field that can withstand THE SUN then why aren't there shields that block lasers or plasma? If it requires a tremendous amount of energy then why not have it activate only when needed? For a few nano-seconds or the like? If it's too large a device then why isn't it vehicle mounted?
Because there is? In fact its the entire point of the Coronal Adaption trait. Gives an automatic 10 armour against all energy weapons. If you dont want to pick up the 30 CP trait (Expensive!) you can buy yourself the Solar Survival Suit, that does all this and more!
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Duke Rollo Duke Rollo's picture
Re: Not getting the Surya
CodeBreaker wrote:
Because there is? In fact its the entire point of the Coronal Adaption trait. Gives an automatic 10 armour against all energy weapons. If you dont want to pick up the 30 CP trait (Expensive!) you can buy yourself the Solar Survival Suit, that does all this and more!
I know there's one that gives you armor. But that implies that a sufficiently heinous energy weapon could still hurt that morph. I'm talking about one that makes them immune. As in "don't bother rolling damage from that plasma rifle..."
-Duke Rollo
Decivre Decivre's picture
Re: Not getting the Surya
Duke Rollo wrote:
@Decivre Sir, kindly divorce yourself from the idea that my argument is "I can't do it so it can't be done". That not what I'm arguing and you insisting it is (with your smelling example) only serves to frustrate both of us. I'm not here to frustrate you, nor am I going to entertain any more "tellings off". Instead, kindly address what I've put forward: that the science behind everything in Eclipse Phase is based in the reality of near-future technology and requires a minimal suspension of disbelief. For farcasting I don't have to re-define how radio waves travel. For habitats, I don't have to change the rules of how architecture works. For uplifts, no one is telling me that they're 100% biomorphs AND have robotic parts. Everything makes sense. EXCEPT for the Suryas which demand that we believe (without any real explanation as to how) that they can both filter the harmful light of the sun AND AT THE SAME TIME not filter out light coming from their friends. Just tell me how they can do this and I'll be happy.
Actually, little to none of the technology in Eclipse Phase is anything remotely "near-future". If anything, it is extremely advanced versions of technology that is currently theoretical or in its pure infancy. No research team has come remotely close to creating nanomachines which can produce large objects. No research team has ever created a metamaterial object larger than a few nanometers in size. No research team has ever produced a machine powered by antimatter. No research team has ever produced an artificial intelligence capable of similar intelligence to human beings. No research team has ever successfully emulated a human brain on a computer system. The largest portion of technology in Eclipse Phase does not exist today in a usable way. These things have never happened, and we only know in theory that they are possible. As for some of the things you have mentioned, you are incorrect. Farcasting DOES redefine transmissions (they use neutrino waves, which no one has yet found a way to transmit with information). Habitats DO redefine architecture (toroidal and cylindrical habitats DO NOT EXIST in real life, and are theoretically-designed space architectures). Uplifts do have non-organic parts (all artificial morphs have mesh inserts and cortical stacks, neither of which are organic). Everything only makes sense in the context of the setting itself. They may be one day possible, but the point of Eclipse Phase is to immerse oneself into a setting in which these things do exist, irregardless to whether humanity one day finds out that some of them are an impossibility. Plus, I've completely ignored TITAN and ETI technology, which essentially evokes the [url=http://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/Main/SufficientlyAdvancedAlien]Suf... Advanced Alien[/url] trope to such a high degree that it might as well be fantasy elements.
Duke Rollo wrote:
The more I think about suryas the less sense they make. If they can survive in the sun, then why isn't there a device or implant that a biomorph can use to deal with energy weapons? If we can build a magnetic field that can withstand THE SUN then why aren't there shields that block lasers or plasma? If it requires a tremendous amount of energy then why not have it activate only when needed? For a few nano-seconds or the like? If it's too large a device then why isn't it vehicle mounted? Just not something I'd have in my game as they're written. In the overall flow of EP, they feel like a speed bump. "Everything is pretty awesome and has a realism to it except the SOLAR SPACE WHALES that have shields that no one else can have and can magically communicate using visible light even when they're filtering out all the visible light of the sun..." Bad form overall.
Actually, suryas and other coronal morphs are quite resilient to energy and heat weaponry. Most energy weapons in the core book are likely going to average 1 point of damage on a surya, if it has no sort of armor for added protection. Moreover, the plasma atmosphere of the sun is going to virtually negate your laser weapon at a very short range, likely dispersing it within the already-scorching solar corona. You'd be lucky to successfully hit a target in there, assuming your gun could survive it and you could successfully aim at something. That said, anyone else can have the same shields that the suryas have (they have magnetospheres... the same thing our Earth has on a smaller level)... they just have to make do with the fact that their awesome magnetic shields are supplanted by solar waves, and the only way to maintain them is constant exposure to solar radiation. I'll admit, I can see why you'd find them implausible. Personally, I find a few other elements in the setting to be far more implausible (continuity checks, the lengths that the setting has gone to make biomorphs a rarity, TITAN technology, psi, Pandora gates, that we have somehow prevented everyone from trying to develop seed AI when microchip technology has come so vastly far that we can emulate the human brain in something the size of a credit card), but everyone is going to see something that bothers them. It's the nature of fictional settings.
Transhumans will one day be the Luddites of the posthuman age. [url=http://bit.ly/2p3wk7c]Help me get my gaming fix, if you want.[/url]
KarmaInferno KarmaInferno's picture
Re: Not getting the Surya
Decivre wrote:
Flash blindness has never been proven to cause permanent blindness. Most studies have shown that while the retinal pigments become bleached with exposure to bright light, they also heal from this bleaching in all known cases. The only situations in which light exposure causes permanent blindness are ones where vast amounts of thermal and ultraviolet radiation are also present, and since the other two definitely cause blindness no one has ever been able to discern whether light can as well. That said, all situations where heat and ultraviolet light are not factors have not yielded people who were permanently blinded. While I do agree that looking at the sun during an eclipse will cause damage quickly that often doesn't cause pain, this is also true with sunburns in other parts of the body... you usually don't feel pain until long after. Eyes get damaged faster by the sun because our eyes are more sensitive, and the ultraviolet light and thermal radiation affect them far quicker.
Here's the thing. Even if it's not "permanently damaging", healing kinda requires you allow the eyes TIME to recover. That means removing or shielding them from the damage source. The question was, "why would Surya need protection from visible light?" Without it, they'd be no different than a normal human spending the rest of his life staring directly into the sun. The damage might be able to heal, but there's no opportunity to heal, as the damage never stops incoming.
Decivre Decivre's picture
Re: Not getting the Surya
KarmaInferno wrote:
Here's the thing. Even if it's not "permanently damaging", healing kinda requires you allow the eyes TIME to recover. That means removing or shielding them from the damage source. The question was, "why would Surya need protection from visible light?" Without it, they'd be no different than a normal human spending the rest of his life staring directly into the sun. The damage might be able to heal, but there's no opportunity to heal, as the damage never stops incoming.
The difference being that humans don't have nanotechnological healing assistance which makes it possible for them to heal constantly... whereas the surya does (all solar morphs require medichines to do constant maintenance on their bodies or else they simply would not be able to survive; it's a requirement of the coronal adaptation).
Transhumans will one day be the Luddites of the posthuman age. [url=http://bit.ly/2p3wk7c]Help me get my gaming fix, if you want.[/url]
CodeBreaker CodeBreaker's picture
Re: Not getting the Surya
KarmaInferno wrote:
Here's the thing. Even if it's not "permanently damaging", healing kinda requires you allow the eyes TIME to recover. That means removing or shielding them from the damage source. The question was, "why would Surya need protection from visible light?" Without it, they'd be no different than a normal human spending the rest of his life staring directly into the sun. The damage might be able to heal, but there's no opportunity to heal, as the damage never stops incoming.
Good thing we have magical nanomachines capable of doing the healing for us then isn't it :D E: Scooped by D *shakes fist*
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KarmaInferno KarmaInferno's picture
Re: Not getting the Surya
Okay, but that still doesn't explain how if they've got multi-gigawatt flashlights shining in their eyes all the time, how they can see the tiny faint lights from the guy next to the flashlight. Unless, of course, as I suggested they have some way of filtering the input so they CAN see their friends. Like using a set of wavelengths not so heavily output by the sun to communicate, and having solar filters that allow that narrow band of wavelengths in. This answers Rollo's question on how they communicate, without resorting to "It's Magic!" -karma
Decivre Decivre's picture
Re: Not getting the Surya
KarmaInferno wrote:
Okay, but that still doesn't explain how if they've got multi-gigawatt flashlights shining in their eyes all the time, how they can see the tiny faint lights from the guy next to the flashlight. Unless, of course, as I suggested they have some way of filtering the input so they CAN see their friends. Like using a set of wavelengths not so heavily output by the sun to communicate, and having solar filters that allow that narrow band of wavelengths in. This answers Rollo's question on how they communicate, without resorting to "It's Magic!" -karma
My guess is that their eyesight works more similarly to a dog's ability to pick up scents, and is able to discriminate between various light sources and such far better than human eyes can. Furthermore, their photoreceptor cells are likely more accurate... unlike our cone cells, which actually pick up a range of light and their ability to read light overlaps (which is how we see the whole spectrum), suryas likely have far more types of cones cones for many frequencies of light, which are only able to pick up a very narrow spectrum. Their brains are capable of reading these cones individually with discrimination, akin to a bloodhound's nose with scents, rather than using them to paint a picture as our eyes do. This allows them to use them as effective communication tools, while they rely on their lateral lines for actual guidance and "vision". That said, surya visual communication relies on patterns of light and dark, not on individual colors. It would be more like a complex form of morse code, becoming dim and then becoming as bright as the rest of the sun rapidly in specific patterns to send specific messages. Even in the bright of the sun, this should be possible.
Transhumans will one day be the Luddites of the posthuman age. [url=http://bit.ly/2p3wk7c]Help me get my gaming fix, if you want.[/url]
TBRMInsanity TBRMInsanity's picture
Re: Not getting the Surya
KarmaInferno wrote:
Found this online at the Lawrence Berkeley website: [img]http://www.lbl.gov/Science-Articles/Archive/sb/Aug-2004/reflectance_wave... I see a couple of wavelength gaps there. -karma
A lot of the gaps are in the infared which if you have eyes tuned to the infared you can see. Thus the visual communication could be in that spectrum.
Jovian Motto: Your mind is original. Preserve it. Your body is a temple. Maintain it. Immortality is an illusion. Forget it.
Duke Rollo Duke Rollo's picture
Re: Not getting the Surya
Decivre wrote:
Duke Rollo wrote:
@Decivre Sir, kindly divorce yourself from the idea that my argument is "I can't do it so it can't be done". That not what I'm arguing and you insisting it is (with your smelling example) only serves to frustrate both of us. I'm not here to frustrate you, nor am I going to entertain any more "tellings off". Instead, kindly address what I've put forward: that the science behind everything in Eclipse Phase is based in the reality of near-future technology and requires a minimal suspension of disbelief. For farcasting I don't have to re-define how radio waves travel. For habitats, I don't have to change the rules of how architecture works. For uplifts, no one is telling me that they're 100% biomorphs AND have robotic parts. Everything makes sense. EXCEPT for the Suryas which demand that we believe (without any real explanation as to how) that they can both filter the harmful light of the sun AND AT THE SAME TIME not filter out light coming from their friends. Just tell me how they can do this and I'll be happy.
Actually, little to none of the technology in Eclipse Phase is anything remotely "near-future". If anything, it is extremely advanced versions of technology that is currently theoretical or in its pure infancy. No research team has come remotely close to creating nanomachines which can produce large objects. No research team has ever created a metamaterial object larger than a few nanometers in size. No research team has ever produced a machine powered by antimatter. No research team has ever produced an artificial intelligence capable of similar intelligence to human beings. No research team has ever successfully emulated a human brain on a computer system. The largest portion of technology in Eclipse Phase does not exist today in a usable way. These things have never happened, and we only know in theory that they are possible. As for some of the things you have mentioned, you are incorrect. Farcasting DOES redefine transmissions (they use neutrino waves, which no one has yet found a way to transmit with information). Habitats DO redefine architecture (toroidal and cylindrical habitats DO NOT EXIST in real life, and are theoretically-designed space architectures). Uplifts do have non-organic parts (all artificial morphs have mesh inserts and cortical stacks, neither of which are organic). Everything only makes sense in the context of the setting itself. They may be one day possible, but the point of Eclipse Phase is to immerse oneself into a setting in which these things do exist, irregardless to whether humanity one day finds out that some of them are an impossibility. Plus, I've completely ignored TITAN and ETI technology, which essentially evokes the [url=http://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/Main/SufficientlyAdvancedAlien]Suf... Advanced Alien[/url] trope to such a high degree that it might as well be fantasy elements.
Duke Rollo wrote:
The more I think about suryas the less sense they make. If they can survive in the sun, then why isn't there a device or implant that a biomorph can use to deal with energy weapons? If we can build a magnetic field that can withstand THE SUN then why aren't there shields that block lasers or plasma? If it requires a tremendous amount of energy then why not have it activate only when needed? For a few nano-seconds or the like? If it's too large a device then why isn't it vehicle mounted? Just not something I'd have in my game as they're written. In the overall flow of EP, they feel like a speed bump. "Everything is pretty awesome and has a realism to it except the SOLAR SPACE WHALES that have shields that no one else can have and can magically communicate using visible light even when they're filtering out all the visible light of the sun..." Bad form overall.
Actually, suryas and other coronal morphs are quite resilient to energy and heat weaponry. Most energy weapons in the core book are likely going to average 1 point of damage on a surya, if it has no sort of armor for added protection. Moreover, the plasma atmosphere of the sun is going to virtually negate your laser weapon at a very short range, likely dispersing it within the already-scorching solar corona. You'd be lucky to successfully hit a target in there, assuming your gun could survive it and you could successfully aim at something. That said, anyone else can have the same shields that the suryas have (they have magnetospheres... the same thing our Earth has on a smaller level)... they just have to make do with the fact that their awesome magnetic shields are supplanted by solar waves, and the only way to maintain them is constant exposure to solar radiation. I'll admit, I can see why you'd find them implausible. Personally, I find a few other elements in the setting to be far more implausible (continuity checks, the lengths that the setting has gone to make biomorphs a rarity, TITAN technology, psi, Pandora gates, that we have somehow prevented everyone from trying to develop seed AI when microchip technology has come so vastly far that we can emulate the human brain in something the size of a credit card), but everyone is going to see something that bothers them. It's the nature of fictional settings.
Good thing you focused on my request of "Just tell me how they can do this and I'll be happy" rather than trying to needlessly argue all the other stuff I put in there. I sense that our discourse has gone about as far as it can go and that you've reached the point of singularity where you're arguing with me just to argue with me. Thanks for your contributions and take care.
-Duke Rollo
Decivre Decivre's picture
Re: Not getting the Surya
Duke Rollo wrote:
Good thing you focused on my request of "Just tell me how they can do this and I'll be happy" rather than trying to needlessly argue all the other stuff I put in there. I sense that our discourse has gone about as far as it can go and that you've reached the point of singularity where you're arguing with me just to argue with me. Thanks for your contributions and take care.
If you want people to respond to a simpler point of what you are saying then say it in simpler terms. When you write a four-paragraph statement, people are going to probably respond to a four-paragraph statement. Besides, I've already addressed the point... twice... in this thread....
Transhumans will one day be the Luddites of the posthuman age. [url=http://bit.ly/2p3wk7c]Help me get my gaming fix, if you want.[/url]
Duke Rollo Duke Rollo's picture
Re: Not getting the Surya
Duke Rollo wrote:
I sense that our discourse has gone about as far as it can go and that you've reached the point of singularity where you're arguing with me just to argue with me. Thanks for your contributions and take care.
Decivre wrote:
If you want people to respond to a simpler point of what you are saying then say it in simpler terms. When you write a four-paragraph statement, people are going to probably respond to a four-paragraph statement. Besides, I've already addressed the point... twice... in this thread....
See what I mean?
-Duke Rollo
TBRMInsanity TBRMInsanity's picture
Re: Not getting the Surya
Duke Rollo wrote:
Duke Rollo wrote:
I sense that our discourse has gone about as far as it can go and that you've reached the point of singularity where you're arguing with me just to argue with me. Thanks for your contributions and take care.
Decivre wrote:
If you want people to respond to a simpler point of what you are saying then say it in simpler terms. When you write a four-paragraph statement, people are going to probably respond to a four-paragraph statement. Besides, I've already addressed the point... twice... in this thread....
See what I mean?
Looks more like trolling to me.
Jovian Motto: Your mind is original. Preserve it. Your body is a temple. Maintain it. Immortality is an illusion. Forget it.
Thunderwave Thunderwave's picture
Re: Not getting the Surya
Duke Rollo wrote:
Duke Rollo wrote:
I sense that our discourse has gone about as far as it can go and that you've reached the point of singularity where you're arguing with me just to argue with me. Thanks for your contributions and take care.
Decivre wrote:
If you want people to respond to a simpler point of what you are saying then say it in simpler terms. When you write a four-paragraph statement, people are going to probably respond to a four-paragraph statement. Besides, I've already addressed the point... twice... in this thread....
See what I mean?
Jimmny Christmas, cut it the hell out you two. It's like a verbal game of "I'm not touching you!" in this thread.
CodeBreaker CodeBreaker's picture
Re: Not getting the Surya
Thunderwave wrote:
Duke Rollo wrote:
Duke Rollo wrote:
I sense that our discourse has gone about as far as it can go and that you've reached the point of singularity where you're arguing with me just to argue with me. Thanks for your contributions and take care.
Decivre wrote:
If you want people to respond to a simpler point of what you are saying then say it in simpler terms. When you write a four-paragraph statement, people are going to probably respond to a four-paragraph statement. Besides, I've already addressed the point... twice... in this thread....
See what I mean?
Jimmny Christmas, cut it the hell out you two. It's like a verbal game of "I'm not touching you!" in this thread.
Isn't it wonderful? Its like I am reliving my days from Shadowruns Dumpshock! :D
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KarmaInferno KarmaInferno's picture
Re: Not getting the Surya
You know, I've had some time to think about it, and I think the disconnect is this: The Surya and their solar environment as presented in Sunward are based on a 'romantic' idealized idea of what swimming in the solar sea would be like. I mean, look at the cover art: [img]HTTP://WWW.KARMAINFERNO.COM/images/sunward_cover_500.jpg[/img] Downright DARK, considering, isn't it? And yet, it looks a lot like other fantasy and sci-fi art depicting flying around in the solar corona. they crank down the brightness a few million notches so the viewer can make sense of what's being shown. Contrast to what it'd probably look like in real life, assuming you could even see anything: [img]HTTP://WWW.KARMAINFERNO.COM/images/sunward_cover_REAL.jpg[/img] While more accurate, not nearly as interesting or pretty. This also kinda explains why the coronal adaption only gives 10 points of energy armor. If it was real life, the coronal adaption would probably have to give energy armor in the thousands, tens of thousands, to block out the sun's various thermal and radiative energies. It should in turn pretty much make you utterly immune to any energy or heat based weapons unless that weapon had an output exceeding that of the sun. Yet, in EP, only 10 points of energy armor is enough to protect you against the solar corona. Rollo, you're right, it dosen't make much sense if you're trying to apply real life to the equation. Surya are firmly in the realm of "looks cool" and as such probably shouldn't be measured against reality. -karma
icekatze icekatze's picture
Re: Not getting the Surya
hi hi Vision is relative. The gamut for a Surya is liable to be very different from that of a human. Dark colors for a Surya are going to be blindingly bright to the human eye. In a similar manner, what is dark for us could be just bright and dandy for a nocturnal predator. Surya could very easily use the same mechanism that people use today to take photographs of the sun that are anything other than a pure white disk. [url=http://i163.photobucket.com/albums/t294/coolxterior/Wallpapers/Aurora.gi... The sun's radiation alone wouldn't muck up any signals, but it's magnetic field certainly would add to the process. My guess is that they would probably want to use lasers for communications. I don't have the book, I don't know what claims they make about Surya and where they actually hang out in relation to the sun, so I can't say much about the plausibility of their material science. The photosphere is a relatively much nicer place than the corona, but it is still way too hot for material substances. (The corona typically ranges between 1 million and 3 million degrees kelvin, but can get as hot as 10 million K, much hotter than the photosphere's downright chilly 5.8 thousand K) For the sake of argument however, if they can make a morph that can withstand the temperatures, they should be able to make a projectile that can withstand them too. Heat and radiation resistance are relative too, everything reacts to excess heat, regardless of what it's standard equilibrium temperature is. Lasers aren't going to be stopped by magnetic fields. A single pulse of 100 Megajoules is roughly the equivalent of 25 kg of TNT. If your vessel is built to withstand the force of 100 MJ worth of suns rays, that doesn't mean it can withstand the combined 200 MJ worth of suns rays and laser weapon. In reality, plasma makes a very poor weapon anyway, but this is eclipse phase so who knows? While I concede your point, i feel obliged to point out that atmospheric re-entry would not be particularly difficult for a genetically engineered biomorph. Give it a flat, high drag turtle shell of moist tissue inside a carbon (bone) lattice and you could pull it off, not sure why you would do that though, since it seems like a one shot deal and you might as well use an external shell. I imagine a campaign with all Surya players might be for people who want space combat, and probably would involve titan relics, space aliens, or any other power that could hang out in the sun too.
TBRMInsanity TBRMInsanity's picture
Re: Not getting the Surya
I'm not sure I would want to be in an all Surya campaign. "Ok guys, we are going to head north for the next three months as there is more Hydrogen to be harvested."
Jovian Motto: Your mind is original. Preserve it. Your body is a temple. Maintain it. Immortality is an illusion. Forget it.
CodeBreaker CodeBreaker's picture
Re: Not getting the Surya
TBRMInsanity wrote:
I'm not sure I would want to be in an all Surya campaign. "Ok guys, we are going to head north for the next three months as there is more Hydrogen to be harvested."
Agreed. They are story pieces, something amusing for a GM to throw in now and then. Not really useful for anything else. I decided to make myself a Venusian varient for the same purpose.
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icekatze icekatze's picture
Re: Not getting the Surya
hi hi A Surya might be a good morph to sleeve into if you want to get away from it all for a while. It is quite possible that a significant number of them are fugitives from various legal entities, laying low (in both a literal and figurative sense) while the heat is on (oh, the puns just keep coming!)
TBRMInsanity TBRMInsanity's picture
Re: Not getting the Surya
There is a strong connotation that the Suryas are actually neo-cetaceans. May years of isolated wandering across the surface of the sun can only be tolerated by a mind set that is use to it (something whales do currently).
Jovian Motto: Your mind is original. Preserve it. Your body is a temple. Maintain it. Immortality is an illusion. Forget it.
GreyBrother GreyBrother's picture
Re: Not getting the Surya
So... silly idea i have here, but how about a Mercurial in a White Surya who deliberatly attacks ships and non-surya morphs because [insert reason here]? And he is hunted by an Jovian Captain with a cyberleg. Randomness of the Universe, i'm awful.
TBRMInsanity TBRMInsanity's picture
Re: Not getting the Surya
GreyBrother wrote:
So... silly idea i have here, but how about a Mercurial in a White Surya who deliberatly attacks ships and non-surya morphs because [insert reason here]? And he is hunted by an Jovian Captain with a cyberleg. Randomness of the Universe, i'm awful.
Does Moby Dick really need a reason?
Jovian Motto: Your mind is original. Preserve it. Your body is a temple. Maintain it. Immortality is an illusion. Forget it.
GreyBrother GreyBrother's picture
Re: Not getting the Surya
Nah, when you are a big white whale, you are so awesome, you're above reason.

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