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Encyclopedia > Stasis field
This article or section should be merged with Stasis

A stasis field is an imaginary phenomenon that is often used in science fiction that slows the passage of time inside it, or stops it entirely.


Stasis fields in these fictional settings often have several common characteristics. These include infinite or near-infinite rigidity, making them "unbreakable objects", and a perfect or nearly-perfect reflective surface.


Particularly notable examples of stasis fields in science fiction include:

  • Larry Niven's Known Space, in which stasis fields are sometimes found containing artifacts from civilizations billions of years extinct
  • Vernor Vinge's Peace Authority series in which stasis fields (called bobbles) are always perfectly spherical and exist for a fixed duration set at their time of creation - bobbles cannot be "burst" prematurely.

There are real phenomena that cause time dilation similar to a stasis field's. Velocity near light speed or a powerful gravitational field will cause time to progress more slowly.


  Results from FactBites:
 
Stasis (fiction) - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (637 words)
Stasis (IPA: /ˈsteɪsɪs/) is a science-fiction concept akin to suspended animation.
A stasis field is a region where a stasis process is in effect.
In Vernor Vinge's The Peace War and Marooned in Realtime, the "bobble" is a spherical stasis field which is used as a weapon, shield, storage space, and time machine.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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