• Rinox@feddit.it
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    1 year ago

    Really? How? There’s like no light, millions of bars of pressure, temperatures that rival the sun, and, if I’m not mistaken, once you go low enough you should just end up in a big sea of liquid hydrogen. Not to mention the huge amounts of radiations you’d be subjected to, the thousands of km/h winds and the extreme storms inside.

    Thinking about it, entering a gas giant would be pretty terrifying.

    • Skips@pawb.social
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      1 year ago

      In star citizen, it’s a cloud city that floats in the upper atmosphere of the gas giant

    • merc@sh.itjust.works
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      1 year ago

      There’s like no light

      At what depth?

      millions of bars of pressure

      At extreme depths, but why go that deep?

      temperatures that rival the sun

      Gas giants are mostly cold.

      once you go low enough you should just end up in a big sea of liquid hydrogen

      Which is a thin layer over the metallic hydrogen, which goes mostly down to the (theorized) solid core. But why go down there?

      Not to mention the huge amounts of radiations you’d be subjected to

      You’d probably be much safer from radiation than even at home on earth. Jupiter has a massive magnetic field and so it would shield you from the sun’s radiation. Since it’s a gas giant, not a star, it’s not emitting any radiation.

      The storms would definitely be an issue though, as would the gravity. But, maybe there’s a place where the storms aren’t as bad? Maybe the center of the Great Red Spot is like the eye of a hurricane on Earth and is relatively calm.

      Whenever people “land” on gas giants in Sci-Fi, it’s floating cities. That makes sense because there’s no “surface” at any reasonable survivable pressure. There isn’t even a liquid surface, even though there’s a liquid hydrogen layer, it just gradually changes from gas to liquid as the pressure increases.

      A floating city is still probably an impossibility based on the violence of the atmosphere, but the temperatures and pressures of the top of the atmosphere really aren’t too bad. It’s just the weather and the gravity that would be a problem (oh, and of course that the atmosphere is not only poisonous but corrosive). But, that can all be hand-waved away for some fun sci-fi floating city building.

      • Rinox@feddit.it
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        1 year ago

        Yeah, I was thinking about going into a gas giant, walking on it and exploring it. It didn’t occur to me they were referring to Bespin-like floating cities

    • marmo7ade@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      How do you achieve faster than light travel in starfield?

      It’s called science-fiction.