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Slipspace COM launcher

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Template:Ratings The Slipspace Communications (COM) launcher is an experimental piece of technology invented by the United Nations Space Command that allows faster-than-light communication.[1] It is the only known example of superluminal technology apart from the Slipbeacon, which may be an alternate name for the Slipspace COM launcher, and the Forerunner technology that synchronizes the Halo Array's firing sequence.[2][3]

Function

After a communications is probe launched by an underground gauss accelerator, a Shaw-Fujikawa Translight Engine creates a Slipspace rift in high orbit so that the COM probe goes through Slipspace like a "bullet" on an ultra-precise trajectory. It rips through normal time-space, travels through Slipspace, and drops back into normal space at its pre-set coordinates. The probe can traverse as far and as fast as any UNSC ship.[4]

Distribution

The wide-spread use of this technology could revolutionize long-distance communication, as it is far faster than conventional radio communication. If each ship were outfitted with such a device, messages could be delivered without requiring a ship to travel through space to manually give the message. Unfortunately, the cost to build a Shaw-Fujikawa drive and an ultra-precise low-mass launcher is comparable that of a fleet of ships, and even a single probe is worth the value of a capital city on one of the Outer Colonies.[4]

As of February 20th 2551, only three Slipspace COM launchers were known to exist: there was one each Earth and one on Reach[4], and a secret one on Onyx. The one on Reach was almost certainly destroyed during the fall of the planet, while the one on Onyx was destroyed by Sentinels it after sent a message to Earth.[1]

Template:Conjecturalization According to page 122 of the Halo Graphic Novel, some sort of superluminal communications system was used by Dr. Catherine Halsey to contact Earth while onboard the Template:UNSCship. Halsey may have used the launcher from Reach to send this message. She was willing to risk several lives to keep this data transfer secret.[notes 1][5] Template:Conjecturalization End

List of appearances

Notes

  1. ^ The transcript seems to show Halsey transmitting commands in real time. Even if this is accomplished using a script, it still takes about 36 minutes for the data to be transmitted from Earth to somewhere near Eridanus Secundus. The log in the Graphic Novel has an opening timestamp of 04:16 on September 12th, 2552; chapter 27 of Halo: First Strike opens at 04:50 on September 12th, at which point the data has apparently been received. The distance is unknown, however, and so the exact speed can not be calculated.

Sources

  1. ^ a b Halo: Ghosts of Onyx, page ??
  2. ^ Halo: Blood Line Issue 1
  3. ^ Halo 2, level The Great Journey
  4. ^ a b c Halo: Ghosts of Onyx, page 105
  5. ^ Halo: First Strike, page 237