Saturn Arrival by geirla
Open full image in new tab Members remain the original copyright holder in all their materials here at Renderosity. Use of any of their material inconsistent with the terms and conditions set forth is prohibited and is considered an infringement of the copyrights of the respective holders unless specially stated otherwise.
Description
I went a little overboard on detail on this model. Probably should have used Instances for a lot of the parts, but Bryce 7 did hold it together, with just a few odd crashes. It's only 5644 objects and 375748 polygons, but Bryce gets a bit cranky. Tried converting some of the cargo canisters into objects, but that shot up the polygon count to the point where Bryce exceeded 2GB memory and crashed -- wonder if they're working on a 64-bit version. Having 50 lights caused a little bit of havoc, too, but I somehow hit upon the combination of factors that dropped the rendering time from ten hours to one. Then I had the hardest times with the transparency on Saturn's rings, even though I had used it before with Bryce 6. Even after a decade, I'm still stumbling onto new features or behaviors of Bryce.
Thanks as always for viewing, commenting and favoriting. The last one hardly got any comments. Must have been boring, but I reused the Byzantium class frigate anyway.
---
In the early twenty-second, hauling cargo to the outer system was particularly expensive. For one thing, low velocity ships required months of travel time. Taking into account time for cargo transfer and maintenance it was a full year to Saturn and back. At that flight rate, it's hard to pay back the cost of a freighter. Worse, the colonists on Titan and the other moons didn't exactly produce a lot of goods for export. On average, a colonist took about 50-100 tons to establish and another ton a year to supply, so there was a lot of tonnage going out, and nothing coming in.
Few ships made the trip. That alone kept up the prices, but it required big ships. Freight was packed in deep space canisters, each containing 18 FEU, or standard forty-foot containers, stacked two by three by three into a hardened space-proof vault. That amounted to between five and eight hundred tons net cargo per canister. Giant two thousand cubic meter tanks held liquid or gaseous materials.
To cut costs, the freighters used water for propellant. On a Port class heavy freighter, forty-nine primary multiphase microwave thrusters accelerated steam at a few hundred thousand meters per second to provide velocity. Using water for propellant was the only way to make money on the Jupiter and Saturn runs. At the outer stop, the freighter would take on enough water for a complete round trip, saving the cost and effort of providing propellant for the next trip out.
In the second and third decades of the twenty-second century, only two large ships, the Dorado Space Industries Port Royal and Tortuga, regularly made the Saturn freight run. In addition to forty-two attachments for canisters or tanks, the ships could also carry up to two hundred passengers in the forward spin wheels.
The passenger wheels were generally fully loaded on both legs of the journey. Contrary to popular myth, not everyone who gained the funds, skills or patronage to emigrate off Earth stayed in space. The reality of life on cold hostile worlds, living in tubes or domes or deep tunnels where even the air is precious did not always live up to the expecations of those who sought to escape the crowded arcologies and free towns. About a third of emigrants did not adjust; of those, about half managed to scourge enough for a return trip; the other half often... well, eventually they were recycled.
The Port class ships were the last commercial interplanetary vessels to forgo lifeboats. The accepted wisdom was that it was best to stay aboard even a crippled ship when hundreds of millions of kilometers from rescue. But when the Tortuga's main reactor melted down, that belief proved fatal. A few managed to eject a cargo canister as a makeshift lifeboat, hoarding scarce air, water and food until rescue. Only one man survived the 171 days before help arrived. Recycling. After that drama, long duration lifeboats became mandatory for interplanetary ships.
Great Big Book of Spaceships (Eight Edition), Public Information ePress, 2180
Comments (12)
1971s
Nice!
DPW
Hey, I love the Byzantium! And any vista with Saturn in it rocks in my book. Would closer to the rings be possible, to give a bit more of that "space is so hugely mindboggling big" feel?
kjer_99
Interesting read and I love the title of the "book." Surprised that more folks didn't comment on your last posting. I certainly thought it was very good. Think we've all had a few postings like that at one time or another.
peedy
Fantastic scene! Corrie
shayhurs
Well done!
Seaview123
As usual, amazing work, and your sci-fi story accompanying the picture is just as imaginative. The ship in the foreground looks pretty much like what I'd pictured the ships in David Weber's Honor Harrington series to look like. Interesting as always.
NefariousDrO
That's such a cool ship, and I for one love the Byzantium-class ship as well. I'm fascinated by the story as well, I keep thinking about the early colonies in the Americas for instance. Yeah, the transit time would definitely be a killer for any kind of commerce. The ideas you present are fascinating, and as always your models are grounded in real science and thoroughly believable craft. Great work!
wblack
Very impressive work! This has everything going for it: a credible and interesting design backed by a detailed back-story -- clearly a great deal of thought and effort went into this, a job very well done.
Bambam131
Another incredible image. The ship design looks very well thought out. I do not know about the thrust streak glow of the engines but we can leave this up to artist interpretation. Saturn rings are a hard one to create, as I know first hand myself. It seems when you are able to see the rings shadow it may not be what you want to illuminate your spaceship or visa-versa. The presentation is excellent as always. Have a great Christmas my friend. David
KnightWolverine
dcmstarships
love the orange ship in the foreground
e-brink
Wow! this is a really great image! Fabulous light and colour.