I could have sworn the TNG manual stated that .25C limit.
^but .25c is a bureaucratic limitation, not a technical one. Especially for a trip from earth to mars, there would not be any appreciable time dilation for such a "short" distance.
Rick: Do you expect that the ISA designers would have allowed for the possibility of re-provisioning and re-usage of what was left had Ares IV returned to Earth in the manner originally planned?
(Granted that I'm asking for speculation outside the bounds of what you got from the script and writers' notes here.)
But it would take a certain amount of time to accelerate to that velocity and a certain amount of time to decelerate. Impulse power is depicted as being fast enough for that in TV shows because... well, it's a TV show, you have to fit all the action into a 52 minute screenplay. The slightly harder sci-fi approach would have the ship accelerating in a brachistochrone trajectory that would transfer from Earth to Mars in about 10 days (assuming Mars is at its closest point).I'm seeing that at "full impulse" which is claimed by a technical source to be 1/4th lightspeed it would take 88 min to reach Mars on a direct shot.
Sound reasonable?
That's plenty fast enough for dramatic purpose.![]()
Thought the people in this thread might find this interesting. The latest spaceship "porn" from NASA:
http://spirit.as.utexas.edu/~fiso/telecon/Holderman-Henderson_1-26-11/
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