Avatar of BBeast
  • Last Seen: 1 yr ago
  • Old Guild Username: BBeast
  • Joined: 12 yrs ago
  • Posts: 1624 (0.36 / day)
  • VMs: 0
  • Username history
    1. BBeast 12 yrs ago

Status

Recent Statuses

7 yrs ago
Current I'm now a professional physicist. Isn't that awesome?
6 likes
8 yrs ago
Exams are done! I'm free!
2 likes
8 yrs ago
"Life is complex - it has real and imaginary parts."
2 likes
9 yrs ago
Science doesn't rest
9 yrs ago
Reason Reified, Lord Logiker, Sciencomancer Superbus

Bio

I am a Roleplayer with an interest in science fiction and fantasy, with a preference for Casual. I have been roleplaying for several years, and have even taken a stab at running a few RPs.

Outside the Guild, I am an Australian science student, gamer, musician and roleplayer (that's right, IRL too).


Most Recent Posts

First world politics are very complex. What is a right social libertarian supposed to be? Here in my ol' piece of land we merely have the Government and its opposition!


I'm not sure. But if you want complexity, just take a look over here at Australia. We have a federal election coming up this week, and for the Senate we have 38 different parties, plus 16 independent candidates. Granted, most of them are tiny and won't get in and will be forgotten about until the next election, but it still means we have a ballot paper that is one whole meter long (I'm not even joking. I just measured one).
@BBeast Hey Gratz for 888 Days here! Also @Kho sorry for missing yours by a day.


You will note that most of us have that length of time recorded. This is no coincidence. A few years back the Guild went down and all data was lost. The admin Mahz rewrote the Guild from scratch. As such, the time specified is the number of days we have been a member of this iteration of the Guild. Evidently, new Guild turned 888 days a few days ago.

Speaking of which, what's so special about 888? Is it simply the triplet of digits, or does the number 8 have some significance that I'm missing?
I had a strange nightmare last night. It was about Teknall. BBeast had fallen, and Antarctic had taken over as Teknall. I'm trying not to think about it too much.
@BBeast please, don't let that happen TT-TT


You have piqued my curiosity.
@Antarctic Termite, we have another fanfic for you to write...
Additionally, without Vulamera, poor Lifprasil is going to lose the only influence in his life which isn't trying to mess everything up somehow.

The Great Artisan, Divine Mason, Builder of Civilisations
Level 4 God of Crafting (Masonry, Carpentry)

18 Might & 1 Free Points


Teknall stepped through the rift and into his extra dimensional Workshop, and was immediately buffeted by thermal radiation, the vacuum of space and the harsh lighting which suffused throughout the Workshop. Since none of the machines powered by the Stellar Engine were on, the only source of light was a single open doorway which happened to be on the side facing the star. Since at this proximity the starlight was roughly 40 times the brightness of Galbar's sunlight the reflection off the concrete wall was dazzling and cast sharp shadows across the workshop. Additionally, in this time the workshop had heated to a rather unpleasant temperature of hundreds of degrees. None of these had been problems which concerned Teknall while he had been making Goliath, for both himself and Goliath had no need for air, could see independently of light, and could withstand such temperatures. But he would very soon need a more hospitable environment to work in, and those renovations could not wait until he finished the rest of the Workshop.

Teknall decided that the first thing he would work on was cooling. To counteract the inbound solar radiation, he would need a large radiator array, and some means to transport heat from around the station to the radiators. For the radiators, Teknall fabricated twenty-meter-long panels, one side highly reflective, the other side corrugated and dark so it would emit radiation faster. Inside the corrugations he ran pipes, which would carry heated fluids into the radiators and the cooled fluids away, and to thermally connect those pipes to the radiating surface he used a paste consisting mostly of diamond dust. He also constructed radiator panels which were wider and flatter to be attached to the rear face of the space station, since the space station was permanently facing the sun so as to collect energy from the Stellar Engine. He took all these radiator panels and attached them to the rear of the space station, such that the whole back face was covered in radiator surface and radiator panels extended out from the back like flower petals.

Back in the Workshop, Teknall started milling many, many meters of pipes, some narrow, some wide, and he forged joints and connectors for them too. He also prepared some liquid pumps and heat engines to drive them. Once all the parts were made- so many Teknall had to build iron crates to hold them all so they wouldn't spill over the floor- Teknall when outside and began placing the pipes. To the front face of the space station he inserted the myriad narrow pipes under the aluminium skin, like a network of capillaries. These capillaries all converged to a few wider pipes around the circumference, which then connected the front and rear circular faces of the station, such that the coolant fluids would be heated at the front face and be transported to the radiators at the rear to deposit their heat into the void of space.

But the coolant fluid would not flow on its own. To each of the pipes leading from front to back he attached a pump attached to a heat engine, and he connected each of those heat engines to the Stellar Engine Core, so they could extract a tiny slither of its thermal energy to drive the coolant pumps. With the system finally almost done, Teknall just needed to fill it with coolant fluid. There were many possible options, but Teknall decided to go for mercury due to its high boiling point and reasonable heat capacity, as well as the simplicity of obtaining it. From he connected the coolant system to the mercury box in the Elemental Siphon and let it fill completely with the liquid metal before sealing off the coolant system and disconnecting it from the Elemental Siphon. The quicksilver flowed through the new veins of the workshop, heating up where the starlight struck it, and then emitting its heat through the radiators and into the inky blackness of space.

While he was working on cooling, Teknall decided to also deal with cooling the Stellar Engine Core. The power it received well out-did the power incident onto the station from the sun, so it would need a greater cooling mechanism. Teknall set up a similar system of pumps and pipes, but this time the working fluid was not mercury but molten salt, for the temperatures involved were far greater. A series of heat exchanges allowed the thermal energy to be transferred to progressively cooler coolants until the energy could be dumped into the mercury pumping through the radiators.

With the cooling system done, the temperature inside the workshop was already dropping, and would soon reach an equilibrium point near standard room temperature. Teknall now moved to work on the next step- lighting.

This was not too difficult, at least for a basic lighting system. The Stellar Engine Core could currently only supply thermal energy, so Teknall had to work with that. Incandescence, flames and black-body radiation would be quite inefficient sources of heat, so instead Teknall decided to work with atomic excitation and fluorescence. From doped silica glass he blew a double-layered bulb, with vacuum separating the interior and exterior. To produce the light he inserted a narrow nozzle which would receive high-temperature flame from the Stellar Engine, and a mixture of mercury and metal halides. He sealed the light bulb and made a few more. He put them in reflective housings which would redirect all the light out in a single direction. Then he installed the lights high above the floor, and as they received power the compounds within them were vaporised, their electrons excited and they began emitting light. The modifications Teknall had made to the glass converted higher-energy invisible ultra-violet photons into visible light by fluorescence, enhancing the brightness of the lights. And this light flooded throughout the workshop, illuminating all of it.

His space station had cooling. It had lighting. It was now missing just one crucial ingredient- air. To accommodate air, Teknall went and sealed all the doorways leading into the workshop from the void outside. Each doorway received two doors, one inside and one outside, such that one could step in through the inner door, close it, then open the outer door to leave, all while keeping the air locked inside the workshop.

Once the workshop was sealed, adding air was easy. Teknall simply opened the oxygen and nitrogen doors on the Elemental Siphon and let the gasses flood out until it had reached the same pressure and composition as Galbar's atmosphere. Teknall took a deep breath of this fresh air. Being able to breath was not the only sensory effect an atmosphere had, for he could now also hear, his skin was gently cooled by convection, and he could feel the air moving around him as he moved. Although the workshop might not be completed yet, having air was definitely a major milestone towards its completion.

Yet this air was largely stagnant, and there was no means to control its temperature. Additionally, there was nothing to replenish the oxygen and remove the carbon dioxide should a living thing occupy the station, but that would be a project for another day. What he did do was build large fans which would cause the air to mix and circulate about the workshop. Then he attached those fans to heat pumps, which would extract thermal energy from the air and put it into the cooling system, thus chilling the air and allowing its temperature to be regulated.

Teknall was satisfied with the work he had done. While his workshop was still far from complete, these latest modifications would allow him to use his workshop for his next important project. A rift opened up, which he stepped through, and the workshop was unoccupied once more.

Speaking of which, where's @Legion02? He hasn't posted here for a while, and it shouldn't be from lack of things to post about.

P.S. @Double Capybara, the animals are being dealt with. Toun gave knowledge of animal taming to the Rovaick.
That Grot post was longer than Ebb (not too surprisingly, though). Now I need to get back to studying for my last exam tomorrow before the day completely disappears.

Good post though. Nice to have that bit wrapped up.
@Muttonhawk, in your history, Gerrik and Wind-Striker are preparing to battle against a separate horde to the Grot horde. This separate horde will probably be much lesser known, because Gerrik and co. will (probably) stop them before they actually get very far.

@Kangutso, That is a good point. Vestec promised Kyre an extra 30 days for that Grot horde. What did Kyre want to do with that time?
Well, that's all four stakeholders who have given approval to the demigod plan.

But I think I'll wait until after my last exam on Monday to start a collab or anything.

@poog the pig, did you want to have any of your characters involved at all in discussions/planning/designing/deciding/etc? Or shall the decision to make a demigod to help your city be left to other characters?
@Kho, wow, everyone is coming for the party. I don't blame them. Who wouldn't want to be part of the fight of the millennium?

Speaking of which, that brings the fight up to 7 characters between 6 players. This is getting slightly out of hand. We need to hurry up and get it started before anyone else tries to join.
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