I was left wondering about rotating artificial gravity compartment. Wouldn't it act like gyroscope and resist all attempts at changing attitude? I didn't see any contra-rotating weights. Would such gyroscopic forces damage the ship if attitude was forcefully changed?
Lurky
Firstly, the gyroscopic effect doesn't so much "resist" change in attitude as cause the attitude to change in a different direction to the applied force. The rule is that when a force is applied to a gyroscope to change its spin axis, the resulting motion is in the same direction as the force, but 90° in the direction of rotation.
I can't remember which way the Hermes centrifuge spun, but if it was in the direction of the yellow arrow, and thrust was applied in the direction of the red arrows, then the spacecraft would yaw in the direction of the green arrows. Of course you are right that the shape of the spacecraft (long and narrow) would have a very large "moment of inertia", and too much thrust could wreck it.
Secondly. IIRC, in the movie, they de-spun the centrifuge during retro-firing and course corrections, so I imagine that it would also be de-spun for attitude changes.
Anyone know if NASA took gyroscopic effect into account in Apollo when they used the 'barbecue roll". I imagine they would need either take it into account or de-spin the spacecraft when making course corrections.