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Slipspace translocation: Difference between revisions

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File:Halo2Vistateleporter.png|A typical teleporter node.
File:Halo2Vistateleporter.png|A typical teleporter node.
File:Phantom Teleport.jpg|A [[Type-52 Troop Carrier|Phantom]] teleporting through a Covenant spire.
File:Phantom Teleport.jpg|A [[Type-52 Troop Carrier|Phantom]] teleporting through a Covenant spire.
File:Promethean translocate.gif|An [[Wikipedia:GIF|animated image]] of [[Promethean Knight]] translocating.</gallery>
File:Promethean translocate.gif|An [[Wikipedia:GIF|animated image]] of a [[Promethean Knight]] translocating.</gallery>


==List of appearances==
==List of appearances==

Revision as of 10:10, June 15, 2012

John-117 translocating via Installation 04's teleportation grid.

Slipspace translocation,[1] more commonly known as teleportation, is a method of travel that allows the user to travel nearly instantaneously between locations. This is achieved through the use of slipspace as a travel medium, without the use of a conventional slipspace drive. The Forerunners were the first known civilization to make extensive use of teleportation technology. Later on, this technology was reverse-engineered by the Covenant.

Mechanics

Slipspace translocation technology does not actually "teleport" its users by dematerializing them and re-building them in another location; rather, it encases them in a compressed slipstream field, transporting them from one position to another almost instantaneously. This happens much in the same way that a spaceship uses slipspace to travel between star systems - time passes for the individual, but due to the short distances involved it is negligible.[1] The uncertainty errors involved in translocation are known to cause sensations of being put back together again "from a million pieces" after a transition.[2] In addition, the process typically causes feelings of nausea and disorientation on humans.[3]

Applications

One of the most basic forms of translocation system is the teleporter, a device that allows transit between two fixed points. The Forerunners used several types of teleporters as a form of transport on their various installations, including the Halo Array and the shield worlds.[4] Many Forerunner facilities are also equipped with teleportation grids, which enable transportation across the installation without the use of teleporters,[5] instead using a network of "telemetry clusters" placed throughout the installation to keep the grid operational.[6] Forerunner warriors also employed teleportation systems when deploying to the battlefield.[7] Promethean Knights are capable of translocating over short distances, and Promethean Watchers can teleport Promethean Crawlers to their location.[8]

The Forerunners also built slipspace portals, a large-scale application of translocation technology. Portals allow transporting enormous amounts of mass between two fixed points, across interstellar distances.[9]

The Covenant also managed to reverse-engineer Forerunner translocation technology to a limited degree, using it in their spire battlefield installations, which contain a teleportation system linked to a nearby capital ship, used to transport dropships or other vehicles to the ground.[10] The gravity thrones used by the Hierarchs are known to possess short-range teleportation devices as a form of defensive measure.[11]

Trivia

In most of the Halo games, the effects associated with teleportation involve an intense yellow-orange glow and similarly colored rings that surround the object being teleported. In Halo: Reach, the glow is more subdued and blue-purple in color. It also follows the shape of the object being teleported more closely.

Gallery

List of appearances

Sources

  1. ^ a b Halo: Ghosts of Onyx, pages 311-212
  2. ^ Halo: The Flood, page 237
  3. ^ Halo: Ghosts of Onyx, page 316
  4. ^ Halo Wars, campaign level Beachhead
  5. ^ Halo: Combat Evolved, campaign level, Two Betrayals
  6. ^ Halo Waypoint: The Halo Bulletin: 11/9/11
  7. ^ Halo Legends, Origins Part I
  8. ^ Halo 4 E3 2012 Stage Demo
  9. ^ Halo: Cryptum, page 200
  10. ^ Halo: Reach, campaign level, Tip of the Spear
  11. ^ Halo 2, campaign level, Regret