![]() ![]() Tycho Station Chief of Operations Carlos De Baca - Temporary as a pilot during the early phase of the Free Navy Conflict.Reporter Monica Stuart - Temporary during the Ring Space Incident.Espionage agent Kenzo Gabriel - Temporary during the Eros Incident. ![]() Pastor Anna Volovodov - Temporary during the Ring Space Incident.UN Undersecretary Chrisjen Avasarala - Temporary during the Io Campaign.Botanist Praxideke "Prax" Meng - Temporary crew member until his daughter's rescue.MMC Marine Roberta "Bobbie" Draper - Temporary during Io Campaign, and later after the Slow Zone Incident, before eventually becoming part of the main crew during the Free Navy Conflict.Star Helix Security Detective Josephus Miller - Temporary during both the Assault on Thoth Station and the Eros Incident.Gunner and Pilot Bobbie Draper (Season 6).Assistant Mechanic Clarissa Mao (Season 6).Pilot Alex Kamal (Seasons 1-5) (deceased).Executive Officer and Chief Engineer Naomi Nagata (Seasons 1-6).Captain James "Jim" Holden (Seasons 1-6).In addition to the ship's weapon systems, it carries four (visible on ship's console S6 Ep1) reconnaissance drones, of which three respectively named "Peart", "Lee", and "Lifeson". In its service as an independent contract warship, Rocinante was later outfitted with a light keel-mounted railgun, capable of firing 1-kilogram MCRN-issue tungsten rounds at approximate 9,980 meters/second. 2✕ Torpedo launchers, each with a 10-torpedo capacity.6✕ Nariman Dynamics 40mm Point Defense Cannons.Rocinante possesses numerous advanced Martian weapons systems and materiel, including: As a Corvette-class frigate, the ship was capable of housing thirty Martian officers and crew during its operation with the MCRN. The Rocinante's normal crew complement was well over a dozen navy personnel and officers, and on many missions the ship would also carry at least six marines. Under thrust, g-forces then provide a "downwards" pull amenable to human orientation, simulating gravity. The ship features a storage and engineering deck, machine shop, galley and crew cabins, medical bay, storage deck, crew airlock, command deck and flight deck. But still, it's a cool looking effect-even if not accurate.Akin to a narrow, tall building, the ship's construction is layered floor-by-floor from the drive cone and reactor "upwards" to the flight deck and sensor relays. This spinning air will feel like a wind and the wind would slowly push this debris into the wall-floor (not sure what to call the inner side of the drum). As the ship rotates, it will eventually push the air in the center to also spin. Oh, but eventually this inner floating junk would fall. There are rockets that increase the rotational speed of all of the stuff connected to the ship, but that doesn't happen for the floating debris. The rest of the stuff in the ship is connected to the floors and walls. The debris doesn't rotate around the axis of the ship because nothing pushes it to get it spinning. Why wouldn't the debris "fall" under the influence of the artificial gravity? It wouldn't fall because it's not rotating. Second, the inner debris starts "falling" towards the outer walls of the rotating drum. This is legit and what should actually happen (I love saying "actually happen" for science fiction stuff). First, they appear to rotate because of the relative view from inside the rotating spacecraft. As the Navoo starts to rotate, you can see this "floating" stuff do two things. There is another view of the rotating spacecraft from inside the "drum." The center of the Navoo is basically empty with all the people on the inside wall-but in this case there are a bunch of objects "floating" in the middle after some incident (I won't say what happened). What about the debris in the center of the drum? ![]()
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