Difference between revisions of "Intrasystem jump drive"
From FreeSpace Wiki
(update & clarification, refers to in-system jumping only) |
|||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
− | The first '''intrasystem jump drive''' is | + | The first '''intrasystem jump drive''' is the baseline subspace drive, developed before intersystem drives; it was present during the post-age of space exploration and colonization. |
− | Intrasystem jump drives enable a ship | + | Intrasystem jump drives enable a ship to jump from one location in the system to another, quickly and (relatively) precisely. A jump drive of this kind does not need an intersystem [[jump node|subspace node]], only the presence of a significant gravity well. |
− | + | While subspace travel from one system to another in an intersystem jump takes a variable but relatively brief amount of time (the Lucifer's transit took fifteen minutes), an intrasystem jump is described as "nearly instantanous." | |
− | |||
− | While | ||
[[Category:Technologies]] | [[Category:Technologies]] |
Revision as of 15:45, 30 June 2008
The first intrasystem jump drive is the baseline subspace drive, developed before intersystem drives; it was present during the post-age of space exploration and colonization.
Intrasystem jump drives enable a ship to jump from one location in the system to another, quickly and (relatively) precisely. A jump drive of this kind does not need an intersystem subspace node, only the presence of a significant gravity well.
While subspace travel from one system to another in an intersystem jump takes a variable but relatively brief amount of time (the Lucifer's transit took fifteen minutes), an intrasystem jump is described as "nearly instantanous."