Атмосферные технологии
Четко выверенная манипуляция воздушными массами. Процесс, буквально неотличимый от настоящей мистики. Кредо атмосферного техника, взваленное на его плечи, словно бремя.
Руководство охватывает всю базу данной специализации.
Основы атмосферных технологий
Если вам не приходится работать с трубами и газами, вы не атмосферный техник.
Где достать трубы
Вот ваше оборудование, с которым вам придется работать во время работы.
Раздатчик труб - Массивный аппарат, печатающий трубы.
Ручной раздатчик труб, или Rapid Pipe Dispenser - Ручной инструмент, способный печатать, размещать и удалять трубы. Помещается в рюкзаке, не требует ресурсов.
Ниже приведен список всего атмосферного оборудования, которое вышеуказанные приборы могут выдавать. Внимательно изучите его.
Виды атмосферных труб
Вид | Название | Функция |
Атмосферная труба | Труба общего назначения, применяемая для большинства заданий и перегоняющая любой газ, пущеный по ней. | |
Труба подачи воздуха | Стандартная труба для поставки пригодного для дыхания воздуха на станцию. Должна быть соединена с вентиляционным отверстием. | |
Труба вытяжки воздуха | Стандартная труба для вытяжки загрязненного воздуха и прочих опасных газов со станции. Должна быть соединена с вытяжным отверстием. | |
Труба теплообмена | Труба для охлаждения или нагрева газов, работающая при воздействии температуры окружающей среды. Пример: цикл охлаждения в космосе и цикл нагревания в камере сгорания токсикологии. | |
Универсальный адаптер | Устройство, служащее для переплетения обычных атмосферных труб, труб подачи и вытяжки воздуха. Без него эти трубы невозможно соединить. |
Types of Atmospheric Devices
Types of Disposal Pipe
The Gases
The main goal of atmospherics is to manipulate these in a way that benefits the station. Each type of Gas has different properties that can help or hinder. Your skill in manipulating these will determine the success of your atmospheric machinations.
Nitrogen (N2) | One of the components of the air mix. N2 soaks up heat in the air, and lowers the temperature of a fire. By association, it can very quickly lower the temperature of a fiery rupture to the point where the flames self-extinguish. |
Oxygen (O2) | You probably breathe this. Running out of O2 will cause your slow death by suffocation damage. It is also required for a fire to even start, with the ending the fire when the O2 or plasma (if present) is depleted. Having less than 17 kPa of O2 flowing into your lungs chokes you. |
Air | The gas mix that is distributed in the station. It is composed of 80% N2 and 20% O2. |
CO2 | An invisible, heavy gas, CO2 is one of the first and fastest gases the scrubbers suck out of the air. It chokes people effectively and quickly, and if you can be bothered to set the air alarms up, will result in a invisible room that kills those in it. Takes some setup and can be very, very annoying. The emote for this at below incapacitating levels is gasping and choking. |
Nitrous Oxide (N2O) | A white-flecked gas. Makes you laugh at low doses and at higher ones puts you to sleep. Scrubbers don't deal with it too well and portable scrubbers just choke on it. If using this as a sleep gas mix do *not* forget the O2 at at least 17 kPa, or you will kill someone. Relativly high in density at room temperature. |
Plasma | The oil of the new world. Purple, highly flamable, and highly toxic ("Toxins" and "Plasma" are occasionally used interchangably). Burns hotter as oxygen is added. Can spontainiously ignite if at high pressure with oxygen. The highest density gas at room temperature. |
Station Systems
While pipes themselves will always work if undamaged, atmospheric devices all have certain prerequisites that must be met for them to operate.
Remember, ALL Atmos Devices require a powered APC to work.
In addition, there are other pieces of infrastructure that can/must be used when working with specific atmospheric devices.
Air Alarm
Mandatory for the use of non-passive vents and scrubbers. Allows a wide range of control over a blueprinted rooms current gas contents. Where exactly the Air Alarm is in the room does not matter; As long as the room is blueprinted and powered it will function. Cannot be placed in areas that are not blueprinted.
To learn more about Air Alarms and how to use them, click here: Air Alarm
Computers Consoles
- Atmospheric Alert Computer: This computer console will tell you where your attention is needed. Green means everything is alright, yellow signals something is wrong, and red means things have gone wrong enough for an alarm to be triggered (Usually caused when a room's air stops being breathable).
- Central Atmospherics Computer: Allows remote control of any air alarm on the station that has remote access enabled.
- The Distribution Computers: A console to monitor gas storage contents, control air injectors/extraction vents, etc. If you understand how to use these properly, you probably know what you are doing. Air Injectors REQUIRE these to work.
Atmosia Proper - The beating heart of the Station
In Atmosia, you will see many different colored pipes. These colors are labels, marking out different systems within atmosia.
The Basic Mathmatical Details
Ideal Gas Law
The magical formula for improving your burn mixes.... and explaining why your coolant pipes have such a low pressure.
Formula: PV=nRT
P - Pressure in kilopascals or kPa
V - Volume in liters
n - is the amount of substance of gas (also known as number of moles)
R - is a constant or 8.31
T - Temperature in Kelvin
Cooling a gas will make it take up less space (volume) for each unit (mole) of said gas. This effect also results in a gas at a lower temperature having a lower pressure. Heating a gas will have the opposite effect, resulting in a larger volume and higher pressure per mole.
Conversion to and from Kelvin
While most things will yield temperature in both Kelvin and Celsius, here is the conversion formula just in case.
Formula: K = C + 273.15
C - Celsius
K - Kelvin
(Temperature in Kelvin minus 273.15 is that same temperature, but in Celsius)
Additional Guides
- Guide to Gas Turbine
- Guide to Thermoelectric Generator
- Guide to Supermatter Engine
- Guide to Air Alarms