Hrm...I might be able to help with this...Mad wrote:Yeah, that's pretty much it at a conceptual level. The past couple months, I've been thinking of how I could do an animation of the concept somehow...
Yeah, I seemed to phrase that as a problem, but then turned it into a question.Mad wrote:Not quite sure what you mean here. At short distance, the weak beam will be on the target, but it won't be powerful enough to do any damage until the final surge. I think that's what you're asking about, anyway. What you said seems to be basically how it goes.
Mad wrote:First off, photons don't emit light; they are light.
Why do I manage to put my foot in my mouth so easily? FWIW, I did know that...I just apparently decided that it'd be more fun to look like an idiot.
That was a thought I had when thinking about a particle beam -- some kind of temporary 'counter-forcefield' would fire from an emitter near the tributary beam emitter to counter-balance the tributary beam that was active. This would shut off when the actual opposing tributary beam met with the initial one, and a 'global' tributary forcefield would be emitted from the central portion of the dish to hold all the tributaries in place until the final emission, at which point it would reverse polarity to push it outward instead of holding it in place.Mad wrote:As for the superlaser... since these are exotic particles we're talking about here (in other words, particles that more than likely don't exist in our reality), so they may have unusual properties.
However, the superlaser appears to employ some kind of control over the beam similar to the Yuuzhan Vong dovan basals. This is because conservation of momentum would prevent the beam from just stopping when it collides with the other beams, so something else has to be holding the beam in place.
Yes, precisely.Mad wrote:Are you referencing how the bolt appears to be an arrow that points toward the barrel? I agree, you'd think it'd be reversed when one thinks about half-lives and everything.
Oh, I hadn't thought of that...that would explain it nicely. Except for the reaction quickly stopping...wouldn't it create more of a double-sided dart? Or rather, wouldn't the reactions occur in a sort of bell-curve manner, with a little at one end, a little at the other, and the most in the middle?Mad wrote:But this is a chain reaction, and not just a decay. So perhaps it starts off with as small number of interactions, then grows to a large number of interactions until there's a certain expected maximum, then the reaction quickly stops.
Not saying it would, just wondering why this would remotely help.Mad wrote:Honestly, no idea. Nobody seems to know. At this point, I don't see how it'd do much to change my theory.. might add a couple details, but shouldn't change any of its major points.