Desdichado
Hero
Ooh, hey, good point. I had forgotten that too.Corsair said:Axial tilt will effect the length of the DAYS. During summer, you will have fewer hours of night, during winter fewer hours of daylight.
Ooh, hey, good point. I had forgotten that too.Corsair said:Axial tilt will effect the length of the DAYS. During summer, you will have fewer hours of night, during winter fewer hours of daylight.
Eh, for this setting, I'm thinking more of a Mars-like cold desert setting. Very little surface water at all.BiggusGeekus said:Well, you're going to see more storms. Especially in the spring and autumn.
For transportation you'd likely see fewer catamarans and light craft in favor of blukier ships.
I know you're a big flying island guy, I would imagine stronger wind currents would affect these as well.
Joshua Dyal said:Eh, for this setting, I'm thinking more of a Mars-like cold desert setting. Very little surface water at all.
And for the same reason your "extreme arctic circles" will be bigger. That is, the area that has half a year of light followed by half a year of dark will extend farther toward the equator.Corsair said:Axial tilt will effect the length of the DAYS. During summer, you will have fewer hours of night, during winter fewer hours of daylight.
Joshua Dyal said:Right -- and so a steeper axial tilt will mean that the summer hemisphere is getting even more direct sunlight than on our world, resulting in more extreme seasonal differences.
I presume. Is that the only different, though?
Miln said:What would a world be like with a perfectly circular orbit and no axial tilt?