Since we all agree that it's absurd to think that the train will suddenly stop, it's obvious that the bubble will start moving, right? And if the bubble starts moving, the man inside it must start moving too, right?HemlockGrey wrote:Would the kinetic energy actually be transfered to the man, since the shield is a bubble?A lot of people try to find ways to ignore conservation of momentum in collisions without really thinking about how absurd it is. The example I once gave regarding Dune shielding was that according to them, a man wearing a Dune shield could stand in front of a bullet train and it would just stop on a dime when it touched him; "absurdity" is actually an understatement.
So (and think about this), since the bubble+man have almost no mass in relation to the train, they will both start moving very fast. And what happens to you when you accelerate? Force must be applied. So:
1) When hit by a huge object moving at high speed, you will be accelerated rapidly by the impact.
2) This means a huge force must be applied to your body, since F=ma.
3) There must be some point of application for this force.
4) In the absence of any evidence to the contrary, the only physically likely point for the application of this force is the physical device which generates the shield.
5) The magnitude of the force is such that it would almost instantly kill you.
6) Even if the force were distributed over your entire body (as it is if the train is carrying a huge vertical plate on its front and the plate slams into you), the forces are still more than large enough to kill you.
Is that clear enough?