Hektor Gap by geirla
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Description
This image got a fair amount of post-work in PSP 8.1. Originally, I wanted to use a blur effect on the asteroids (velocity is relative, after all), but I had so much trouble getting the selection right, that I went with a soften brush instead.
I should probably get Photoshop one of these days, but I can't seem to justify the expense. I wonder how much more it would really do for me.
Thanks again for looking and commenting
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We caught the Belters flatfooted at Hektor. Commodore Gautam fooled them good. It looked like we were headed to relieve our people at Strentor, and the 'Roiders concentrated their whole L4 force to meet us.
We started our turnover burn just like we were heading in, then we turned and vectored straight towards Hektor, the main Belt settlement in the Leading Trojans. There was no way the 'Roiders, could turn around and beat us there, especially with their lower max Gs.
Hektor is a binary asteroid: two big lumps of rock locked in a tidal dance. They're only separated by a couple of klicks and the exact size of the gap varies pretty much chaotically. There's also a mess of rocks - some klicks in diameter- circling around the two big ones - spawn of the whole bump and grind dance. So the whole place is kinda of a navigational hazard. And we were coming in at almost 2000kps.
The main settlements on Hektor are on the outboard limbs of the twin rocks. They've got pretty good defenses, so we came in at a vector that limited their reach: a mesh of ships and fighter using the rocks against them. At our velocity, the whole combat envelope was going to last just a couple of minutes.
We dumped our ordinance, burned our glasers, and shot for the Hektor Gap. The Durga was in the van - thirty seconds and 50K klicks ahead on the timetable. It turned to vapor, but whether from enemy fire or a collision, I didn't have time to tell. The thirty of us, my crew and the squad of marines, sat strapped in our chairs, the crew cage spinning to orient against the bursts of thrusters on overload. The gap would pass in less than a blink of the eye. Nothing a human could do now, but trust the computer.
Trust the computer. Trust the computer.
-Lt. Commander Pavel Mirza, HMS Vishnu 27 March 2519
Battle of Hektor, Phase I
Comments (6)
geirla
Um, my bad. The relative velocity should be no more than 500kps - adjust story accordingly. Shouldn't do math before coffee. And I since I can't show you a schematic of a working fusion drive, I know it hardly matters, but I just like to be consistent.
hideakifuji
A red spaceship and comparison of an asteroid intensify a feeling of scale. Flame of a jet coming out of a spaceship is cool.
kjer_99
Fine writing! Those two asteroids are downright "scarifying."
Octaganoid
Love those asteroids !
Biffowitz
Great image, I can't help but feel the vulnerability of the little ship. Nice work!!
wawadave
nice!!!