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How much M/AM to take down ISD shields?
Posted: 2002-12-06 02:09pm
by Hammer
How much matter and antimatter reacting would be required to overwhelm the shields of an ISD?
Using real-world values for the output of a M/AM reaction, not some trek bullshit.
Posted: 2002-12-06 02:35pm
by Mr Bean
I forget the exact numbers, but say its 40 Teratons to drop a section of an ISD's shields and figure from there
I don't remeber MA/AM reaction figures
Posted: 2002-12-06 03:19pm
by Currald
1,862,576 kg: half matter, half anitmatter, would provide that much energy. The energy would all have to be directed toward the shield in question for it to have the required effect, however.
Posted: 2002-12-07 04:30pm
by consequences
1862.576 Metric Tons!
That's a shitload of antimatter.
Posted: 2002-12-07 09:02pm
by neoolong
consequences wrote:1862.576 Metric Tons!
That's a shitload of antimatter.
Damn, better start stockpiling. By the time someone makes a Star Destroyer I should have enough anti-matter to take out the shield.
Just kidding. Is the M/AM explosion directed at one point on the shield, or what is the area that the explosion needs to be directed at?
Posted: 2002-12-07 09:56pm
by Ender
Actually, It's a bit off. Given how explosives release their energy, the threshold would be overcome more easily, and if located all in a single spot, could overload an emitter, causing a small breach in the shields. Basically the same technique the rebels use.
Posted: 2002-12-08 01:28pm
by Dooey Jo
But just launching antimatter on an ISDs shields wouldn't work. Aren't the shields made out of energy? Antimatter can't react with energy, just matter, so it would just bounce away.
Posted: 2002-12-08 01:36pm
by Ender
True, you'd need matter as well. And my suggestion would only work for an instant, because they would expand the prjoection from another nearby emitter to cover the gap. THe resulting area would be weaker, but it wouls still be covered.