Caz
@timberwindart.bsky.social
910 followers 32 following 15 posts
art-only account of @timberwind.bsky.social
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timberwindart.bsky.social
"I only meant to stay a while..."
evening scene of a pensive canid-esque transhuman wearing an elaborate jacket-poncho standing on a balcony in an overcast valley on a large marslike planet.
Reposted by Caz
timberwindart.bsky.social
interestingly, the other launch site they were considering for the K-1 aside from South Australia was the White Sands missile range in Nevada. Apparently actually a quite good location for overland first-stage recovery.)
timberwindart.bsky.social
Episode from the alternate universe where Kistler didn't lose to SpaceX and the K-1 (K-9?) routinely flies out of the Woomera launch complex.
A Bluey episode title card, depicting the slightly wine-bottle shaped Kistler "K-1" RLV flying through the clouds. A subtitle says "[Bluey] This episode of Bluey is called Launch!" A credits card to a Bluey episode, saying "Produced with the assistance of [Australian Government] [Kistler Aerospace] [Screen Australia]"
timberwindart.bsky.social
old sketches I never got round to posting here. miscellaneous spacers
timberwindart.bsky.social
the actual paint-swatch value of the habs that I ran through my big stack of filters to simulate titan haze is a -really bright teal-, if you believe it
timberwindart.bsky.social
Lunine Beach, a sleepy seaside town on the shores of Kraken Mare - a sea of liquid hydrocarbons at the north pole of Titan, largest of Saturn's retinue of icy moons.
We see here a view from a dirigible cargo robot, taken in the far northern regions of Titan, Saturn's largest moon. In the foreground, a peninsula of ice-and-tar 'wetland' terrain stretches off into the distance. On it, a settlement made up of habitat modules of varying sizes - from longhouse-like parks to long twisting arcades, all raised on stilts like the old research bases of Antarctica (most of these stilts are obscured under the bulk of their structure, from this angle), curves off along the more orderly lake-facing shoreline. Looking further afield, past the jumble of braided rivers that makes up the inland side of the peninsula, we see a far shore occupied by a sprawling industrial city - pale plumes of steam rise from the cooling towers of nuclear fusion reactors, chemical plants, and water refineries. The sun, smeared into an orange blur by storied layers of photochemical haze - drifts of complex organics formed from unfiltered sunlight smashing into methane molecules at the top of the Titanian atmosphere - sits low on the horizon at this time of the Saturnian year, casting a ruddy glow comparable in brightness to a bedside lamp.
timberwindart.bsky.social
planetary science lesson
dog-like transhuman and the Saturn system, viewed from a vantage point of high Iapetus orbit
timberwindart.bsky.social
second generation saturnian
On the left, a young dog-like transhuman named Riley holding an orca plushy. On the top right a drawing of Riley's four parents stuck down with a fridge magnet. On the bottom right a postcard with a map of the north polar lake-seas of Titan, Saturn's largest moon, with a pin stuck in the location of Lunine Beach - the small seaside city where they all live.
timberwindart.bsky.social
It's actually just a classic plasma magnet, none of the Q-drive tricks going on. Thrust comes from magbeam-esque particle beam stations in planetary/asteroidal/lunar orbits.
Reposted by Caz
timberwind.bsky.social
The "dusk chorus" - as evening falls on Mangala, its binary companion's infrastructure belt of orbiting power stations catches the sun, brightening to become a ring of stars circling the little Mars analog. (mocked up in Celestia)
timberwindart.bsky.social
Partly that it makes it a touch harder to reproduce with a normal card printer, partly that if the clock chip breaks (or is desynced or hacked) the offgassing rate of the deuterated patch can be used to loosely constrain the card's proper time (direct sampling of the material can get more accurate)
timberwindart.bsky.social
high Mangala orbit, 7998 A.D. (M.Y. 399)
In the foreground is a magnetic sail spacecraft - on one end the polygonal coils of the sail generation machinery, on the other a small nuclear fission plant and its attendant heat-rejection radiators, and in the middle a habitat and tankage for maneuvering propellant. In the background are two planets, orbiting one another much like Pluto and Charon do in the Solar System. Largest in our field of view is a world somewhat like Mars' big sister, with seas and lakes and a partially-oxygenated atmosphere through extensive terraforming efforts. Behind it is a world more like the Mars we know, although it's been partially terraformed - deep glassy canals have been excavated by orbital lens, with significant habitation on their floors. Both worlds have bands of solar power satellites, factories, habitats, and depots in orbit around them, and in the far distance an asteroidal moon roughly Cybele-sized can be just about resolved as a speck flanked on both sides by habitats and infrastructure. Inside an observation room on board the magsail clipper - a little cabin with a round window of bulk diamondoid - three canine-like transhumans look out at Mangala and Kahira while floating in microgravity.
Reposted by Caz
timberwind.bsky.social
Landermere Vallis, Mangala
In a large outflow valley on a terraformed Mars-like binary planet, two dog-like transhumans stand on the waterfront of a riverside city. The old quarter of the city sprawls on the other bank - a conurbation of boxy arcologies and industrial complexes. In the distance, a band of large satellites crosses the sky, and a towering bank of sunset-lit clouds rolls in. The planet's binary companion, a world a fifth the mass of its primary with a thin CO2-dominated atmosphere streaked with wispy clouds of water ice, shines full and bright above the clouds.
Reposted by Caz
timberwind.bsky.social
A selection of historical small-world (~0.05-0.3 Earth masses) SSTOs of the far future.
Reposted by Caz