They wouldn't glow very bright, just a dull red, which would probably be washed out by a weak flashlight. http://www.projectrho.com/public_html/rocket/basicdesign.php#dullred
I was talking about getting rid of heat from a stardrive. Could be any amount. But the idea was that it would be red in idle and blue-white when activated.
In other words, it won't glow blue-white because by then the whole thing will have melted!What color will the radiators glow? A practical one will only glow dull red. You can use the Blackbody Spectrum Viewer to see what temperature corresponds to what color. If it was glowing white hot, the temperature would be around 6000 Kelvin. This would be difficult for a solid radiator, since even diamond melts at 4300 degrees K.
...though I was under the impression the central axis of the fuselage was occupied by a power conduit connecting the two drive spheres.
Again, FWIW- Along the exact axis, yes. That is where the two hypergravity spheres were meant to be linked back to a power source dead center that had a similar linkage to port and starboard to the antigravity stuff going on in the saucer. But flanking the power chase (off axis the saucer plane) was the null gravity tube- the combined assembly of power chase and tube being the ship's "mast" fore to aft and its "yard" port to starboard....though I was under the impression the central axis of the fuselage was occupied by a power conduit connecting the two drive spheres.
Good point!In other words, it won't glow blue-white because by then the whole thing will have melted!
I personally don't care about the technobabble.. I'm just interested in how we portray it on screen, as we have to storyboard some shots around that.![]()
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