Part 2 Planet-Hopping and Rumpus
In a dream, you and your friends are planet-hopping you visit a series of small planets and whenever you arrive it always happens that the people there are celebrating their planet's new year. For them, the new year celebration is a birthday party for the planet: the beginning of a new circle around its star. They light bonfires, put on displays of fireworks, and all go into orbit a kind of mass helter-skelter horizontal sky-diving in all directions.
In going from planet to planet you discover that on all of them speed is measured in cents (in Earth terms about a hundredth of a mile a minute). Not only that, but they all use the same measure of force, which they call a "ton". In Earth terms it's about 2700 pounds,. They have a saying that if surface speed on a planet is a cent then the planet weighs tenthousand tons.
One of the first things to do upon arrival at a small planet, after checking in at the hotel, is to discover the surface orbit speed, the skimspeed where your path curving around the planet just matches falling. Since it takes no effort, this is the speed you and everybody else will be traveling. Never exceed the skimspeed unless you wish to leave the surface, which after all is where the party is. Ten cents wouldn't be at all unusual for skimspeed on a small planet.
Rumpus is tumult, according to Webster's: "a disorderly agitation or milling about". Experience shows that rumpus grows disproportionately with speed. In a milling crowd, whether of convention-delegates, dancers, bumper-cars or celebrants, if you double everyone's speed you may get considerably more than twice the commotion. In some cases doubling the speed might increase the rumpus by as much as sixteen-fold. We can define a rumpus quantity that does increase exactly sixteen-fold when speed is doubled, simply by making rumpus the fourth power of speed. You obtain it by squaring the speed twice a square square cent is a quartic cent.
If the skimspeed on a planet is 3 cents, then its rumpus is 81 quartic cents, which is a considerable amount of rumpus.
The local people say that a planet's rumpus is proportional to how much it weighs. (They mean weight as measured in the planet's own surface gravity in other words the planet's idea of what it would weigh.) They say that heavy planets have a big rumpus, and that for each extra quartic cent of rumpus you can count on an extra tenthousand tons of weight. If the skimspeed on a planet is 3 cents, they say, then the planet is sure to weigh 81 times tenthousand tons.
Proceed to Wildflower Planet.
Copyright © 1999, 2001, 2002 by Leonard Cottrell. All rights reserved.
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