"I'd also like to see the looks on their faces", Jemu laughed. "Right now, I'd bet they're saying I thought nothing went that fast, Sir. Or, they're gone in a flash, Sir. Or, we can't find the UFO, Sir".
"I have a good one for them", said Sassa. "Poor little billy goat
Lost his master.
Stuck in a moat.
Can't you go any faster?"
"Aw that's cute", replied Samia. "We should radio that to them some day".
"I got one", said Tito.
"What is that?", Samia asked.
"Tito replied with a chuckle, "Earth people wear pants. We can tell them get the lead out of your pants".
"We can radio that to them too the next time we come back", Samia laughed along with everyone else laughing.
"I bet that poor old Colonel will be pulling his hair out", Jemu laughed.
"Unless he's bald", Samia added, which got more laughter from everyone.
Pancho then mentioned something he observed when they outran the fighter jets back in Kenya.
"You know, when we left those jets behind, we went at a really really fast speed, and took off really quick", said Pancho. "But it didn't actually feel like anything. There wasn't any of that being moved fast feeling".
"I've noticed that from the beginning of the trip", Nico replied. "Now that Pancho has mentioned it, I'm also wondering about that".
"That's the isolated inertia system. All aerospace vehicles where we're from have it", said Kassa. "It's an energy field that generates the cruiser's own inertia environment to cancel out G forces".
Jemu added, "A move like the one we did back there, loosing those fighter jets, would have torn us and this cruiser to pieces without that system".
"Kassa!", Sassa called out to her brother. "Tell them about the video they showed us in our school science class, demonstrating isolated inertia with that wooden box on top of those sky vans".
"Oh yea. That's really cool", said Kassa. "They first had an old worn out sky van, with a rocket installed in it, set up to run on tracks and operated by remote control. This one didn't have isolated inertia. They placed a big, wooden box on top of the old sky van. Then they powered up the rocket in the sky van, and it took off quick enough to where it could have instantly gone out of sight."
"What did it do?", Pancho asked.
"The sky van shot out from under the box, and the box fell to the tracks. The inertia was so great on the sky van, it tore apart going down the tracks, then the rocket exploded".
"Well, that's what normally would happen", Nico replied, then added, "I don't necessarily mean the rocket exploding, but the sky van tearing apart and the box staying behind".
"Without isolated inertia, yes. But I'm getting to the rest of it", said Kassa. "Then they put the same wooden box on top of a good sky van equipped with an isolated inertia system. Then they had a pilot take off with that sky van as quickly as the rocket powered junked one did. The bottom of the box was being grabbed by the sky van's isolated inertia system with the rest of the box unprotected, subjecting it to outside inertia forces. And, of course, the sky van and it's pilot were okay."
"What happened to the box?", Nico asked.
"It got strewn out into a long trail of wood dust and splinters", Kassa answered. "And the bottom of the box was still intact on top of the sky van".
"Wow, that's amazing", Nico replied as Pancho agreed, then asked, "How does it work?"
"I don't know how all the technical components make it work", Jemu admitted answering Nico's question, then explained to Nico and Pancho. "But I do know what it does. An isolated inertia system enables a craft to become it's own isolated location working independently from any surrounding location it's in. It does it by ensuring that every molecular particle of everything and everyone aboard the craft, including of the craft itself, are moved in synchronization with changes of velocity and direction in order to keep everything intact, but also allowing for nornal movement inside the craft. That kind of synchronized movement of molecular particles prevents them from flying away from each other, thus canceling out any G forces".
"That went a bit over my head, I must admit", Nico admitted.
"Me too", Pancho added.
Samia then told Nico and Pancho a simplified version, saying, "Just think of it as the craft becoming it own little world within the outside world around us. What happens here happens here. And what happens out there happens out there".
Jemu further explained, "It's like how your Planet Earth rotates at one thousand miles per hour at the equator, yet you don't feel it because everything keeps moving together...I admit that's not the best apology being your planet's rotation speed doesn't flucuate, but it does give the general idea".
"I think I get it now", Nico said, then asked, "Those molecule things you mentioned. Are they moved like a heard of wildebeest all running together? And none of them are running ahead or lagging behind?"
"Yes. That's it", Samia assured Nico.
"So...When those particle things we're made of are moved together, we stay together, right?", Pancho added.
"You got it", Nico affirmed to Pancho.
"Well...I guess it's time to be getting you two back home", Jemu said to Nico and Pancho as he headed the cruiser back to their homeland. And what seemed like in no time at all, they were landing in the area where Nico and Pancho had first boarded.
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11 years, 11 months ago
26 Feb 2013 07:17 CET
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