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Post by Haze Gray »

Tesla would've required a great deal of power


Exactly, and earlier you made the claim that
The brute force application of large amounts of raw energy isn't the only conceivable way to shatter planets.


I accept your concession (actually Mr. Wong's argument was better then mine, so I suppose he should be accepting it and not me)
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Post by teleguy »

Tesla would still have required less power than a brute force approach.
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Post by wautd »

Alltough i disagree with Pine Tree and other trekkies on a lot of topics i agree them on one thing, and that is that Trek beats Wars

Not because of their firepower
Not because of their numbers
Not because of their transporters
...

But because they are the good guys. And somehow the good guys always win :P :roll:
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Post by Ghost Rider »

wautd wrote:Alltough i disagree with Pine Tree and other trekkies on a lot of topics i agree them on one thing, and that is that Trek beats Wars

Not because of their firepower
Not because of their numbers
Not because of their transporters
...

But because they are the good guys. And somehow the good guys always win :P :roll:
Wouldn't work since the Rebellion are considered the good guys as well thus negating the overall character shields of both :P
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Post by wautd »

Ghost Rider wrote:
wautd wrote:Alltough i disagree with Pine Tree and other trekkies on a lot of topics i agree them on one thing, and that is that Trek beats Wars

Not because of their firepower
Not because of their numbers
Not because of their transporters
...

But because they are the good guys. And somehow the good guys always win :P :roll:
Wouldn't work since the Rebellion are considered the good guys as well thus negating the overall character shields of both :P
true

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Post by Solauren »

Nah.

The Death Star > Character Shields
I've been asked why I still follow a few of the people I know on Facebook with 'interesting political habits and view points'.

It's so when they comment on or approve of something, I know what pages to block/what not to vote for.
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Post by wautd »

Solauren wrote:Nah.

The Death Star > Character Shields
the power to destroy a planet is insignificant compared to the power of the caractershield

(or is it...? ;)
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Post by Kazuaki Shimazaki »

wautd wrote:
Solauren wrote:Nah.

The Death Star > Character Shields
the power to destroy a planet is insignificant compared to the power of the caractershield

(or is it...? ;)
Depends. Besides, a strong enemy is always allowed to do its due before being destroyed in a good story, as long as it doesn't kill off the main characters. If the Death Star destroys all of the Federation's planets and fleets except for Earth, Picard, Janeway, Sisko, that's not my idea of a Federation victory. But that would be an acceptable result in a show, even with character shields. :D
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Post by wautd »

Hell, a combined strikeforce with redshirts and fierce klingons and that DS is conquered in no time :lol:
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Post by Crown »

tjhairball wrote:The quote states that imaginary and real mass components are held to equal states before and after the transition. Since m(0)=m(r)/(1-V2/C2)^0.5, the real and imaginary components switch after a fashion when you transition from sub to superluminal speeds. It's a very clever abuse of Einstein, but it doesn't explain Star Wars very well - the governing equation for the transition, based on the component maintainence set forth by the E2ICS, is that 2C^2-V(0)^2=V(H)^2 - thus a 1.41c limit. Alternatively, of course, you could assume an extra matter inversion factor, and essentially arbitrarily swap out a sign to get 2C^2+V(0)^2=V(H)^2, but that isn't much better. You're still stuck with an arbitrary speed limit between c and 2c that depends on your initial subluminal velocity.
The second equation I can see is what you used to solve for V(H), which I assume is Hyperspace velocity. The first equation, I am not familiar with, or I can't recognise due to HTML being a shitty format for math talks, could you explain/repeat it. And specifically how the two relate to each other.
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Post by tjhairball »

The root equation I'm using comes straight out of relativity; the phenomenon it describes appears to be the inspiration for the cited explanation for hyperdrive. I hate trying to write math equations in html, so I didn't really bother trying. Us bearded fogeys and our quirky ways...

A website on relativistic mass. I'm not a very good teacher, in my opinion, but this fellow has a reasonable explanation that I think is approachable from a non-physics background. If it's not, please say so and I'll try to come up with a more easily understood explanation. :oops:
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Post by Praxis »

Simple...
Darth Vader can only be killed by Luke Skywalker.

Therefore, the Empire will walk through the Federation easily,

However, they will be unable to kill the main characters, BUT they can still conquer the Federation- only capture Sisko, Picard, etc, not kill.

Then Darth Vader will subject them to interrogation :lol:

Following that, they'll escape, and Sisko will make some speech on the horrors of war while Picard whines about the old days when they were explorers, not warriors.

They'll find some way to get to the Enterprise and Defiant, then beg to Q to send the Empire back. Finally Q will make Picard beg on his knees, then snap his fingers, and Darth Vader will wonder what he's doing back on Coruscant. Unfortunately the Federation will have been wiped out, but Sisko will return to DS9 and Picard will keep exploring with the Enterprise, and not have to worry about bothersome Starfleet Admirals.
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Post by Darth Wong »

tjhairball wrote:
Darth Wong wrote:And your evidence for the claim that no mass dilation can possibly occur during hyperspace travel is ...? Especially when relativistic sublight travel (as demonstrated in real-life particle accelerators) causes mass dilation, hence we have successfully broken this zero-dilation condition that you consider to be an immutable and unbreakable law?
I've made no such claim. Actually, this system is based entirely on mass dilation by speed - that's both the entire point of the complex mass system and its critical mathematical weakness. "Zero dilation," or rather very close to 1.00x dilation effect, occurs at low speeds, which allows maximum effect from a complex mass system.
And why is it necessary to have near-zero dilation? Did you not understand the point I was making?

Let's try a specific example. The mass-dilation formula is as follows:
Image

Say we have a ship with 1+100i kg mass (for the sake of mathematical simplicity). The magnitude of its complex mass is approximately 100 kg (actually a shade below 100.005, but 100 is close enough for our purposes), of which only 1kg is "real".

Now, let us accelerate this object to 1.41c. Its dilated complex mass would be roughly equal to its undilated complex mass. You say that this is the only way that the system can possibly work.

OK, so let's accelerate it to 10c. Its dilated complex mass would now be roughly 10kg. This is not 100kg, so you say it's impossible. Hence, you are essentially arguing that mass dilation is IMPOSSIBLE in a hyperdrive system. Do you get it now?

As I said before, your argument rests on the assumption that the dilated mass must be equal to the initial mass, even though changes in mass due to relativistic dilation do not violate thermodynamics and are therefore not an absolute requirement as you suggest.
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Post by Crown »

tjhairball wrote:The root equation I'm using comes straight out of relativity; the phenomenon it describes appears to be the inspiration for the cited explanation for hyperdrive. I hate trying to write math equations in html, so I didn't really bother trying. Us bearded fogeys and our quirky ways...
Right, so the equation is; M(r) = M(0)*(1-(v^2/c^2))^-0.5

I recognise that, it was the whole m(0)=m(r)/(1-V2/C2)^0.5, that had me for a loss.
A website on relativistic mass. I'm not a very good teacher, in my opinion, but this fellow has a reasonable explanation that I think is approachable from a non-physics background. If it's not, please say so and I'll try to come up with a more easily understood explanation. :oops:
No need. I am an engineer, it's obvious though that I haven't study the theory or relativity, but I do know how to work math. :wink:
Last edited by Crown on 2004-06-26 11:45pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Post by tjhairball »

Darth Wong wrote:OK, so let's accelerate it to 10c. Its dilated complex mass would now be roughly 10kg. This is not 100kg, so you say it's impossible. Hence, you are essentially arguing that mass dilation is IMPOSSIBLE in a hyperdrive system. Do you get it now?
Actually, the complex mass of the system at 10c has a magnitude of ~9.94x its original mass, not ~1/9.94 - it's easy to get the M0 and MR terms mixed up. The meaning is the same, however.

The problem is that the E2ICS quote states that complex mass is held EQUAL with the hyper-transition. That's why the 1.41c limit - the E2ICS is the one banning dilation in hypertransition here, not I.
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Post by tjhairball »

(Although, as mentioned, the entire transition effect is based on a mass dilation - it's just a 1:1 dilation. Perhaps I should say the E2ICS bans non-1:1 dilations in transiting into hyperdrive, that's the real rub of it.)
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Post by Darth Wong »

tjhairball wrote:The problem is that the E2ICS quote states that complex mass is held EQUAL with the hyper-transition. That's why the 1.41c limit - the E2ICS is the one banning dilation in hypertransition here, not I.
No, it's you. The E2ICS never says that the relativistically dilated complex mass is held equal; only that the complex mass is held equal. If you accelerate a 1 kg object to very close to the speed of light, you still describe it as a 1 kg object, albeit one whose dilated mass is much larger.
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Post by tjhairball »

Darth Wong wrote:No, it's you. The E2ICS never says that the relativistically dilated complex mass is held equal; only that the complex mass is held equal. If you accelerate a 1 kg object to very close to the speed of light, you still describe it as a 1 kg object, albeit one whose dilated mass is much larger.
(Much smaller, btw; objects approaching the speed of light lose mass, not gain. Past the speed of light, they theoretically become negative imaginary masses, increasing in magnitude thereon.)
Hyperdrives adjust faster-than-light "hypermatter" particles to allow a jump to light-speed without changing the complex mass and energy of the ship.
If I'm talking about physics, I try not to mistakenly describe it as a 1kg object any more. Relativistic mass is the real mass, as far as relativistic physics is concerned; we just like talking about rest masses, and if we're going slow, it doesn't matter, because the two are awfully close. The problem is that I can't imagine what the E2ICS is proposing if it isn't talking about real (i.e., relativistic) mass; holding rest masses the same in a jump requires no adjustment of imaginary mass components, nor any calculation whatsoever.
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Post by Darth Wong »

tjhairball wrote:(Much smaller, btw; objects approaching the speed of light lose mass, not gain. Past the speed of light, they theoretically become negative imaginary masses, increasing in magnitude thereon.)
Are you disputing the formula I posted earlier? Because that formula produces an extremely large mass as velocity approaches c.
If I'm talking about physics, I try not to mistakenly describe it as a 1kg object any more. Relativistic mass is the real mass, as far as relativistic physics is concerned; we just like talking about rest masses, and if we're going slow, it doesn't matter, because the two are awfully close.
So? The point remains that the ICS does not actually say whether it refers to rest mass or relativistic mass, yet you assume that it MUST be referring to relativistic mass. By deliberately choosing to interpret it in such a manner as to make its own conclusions impossible, you are being disingenuous.
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Post by tjhairball »

Darth Wong wrote:
tjhairball wrote:(Much smaller, btw; objects approaching the speed of light lose mass, not gain. Past the speed of light, they theoretically become negative imaginary masses, increasing in magnitude thereon.)
Are you disputing the formula I posted earlier? Because that formula produces an extremely large mass as velocity approaches c.
GAH! I flipped the M(R) and M(0), sorry. :shock:
So? The point remains that the ICS does not actually say whether it refers to rest mass or relativistic mass, yet you assume that it MUST be referring to relativistic mass. By deliberately choosing to interpret it in such a manner as to make its own conclusions impossible, you are being disingenuous.
The problem is that I can't imagine what the E2ICS is proposing if it isn't talking about real (i.e., relativistic) mass; holding rest masses the same in a jump requires no adjustment of imaginary mass components, nor any calculation whatsoever.
Again, I don't see what the E2ICS is talking about if it's not talking about mass dilation. The informational equivalent, if it's talking about rest mass, is basically to say that hyperdrive works by jumping past lightspeed.
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Post by Darth Wong »

tjhairball wrote:Again, I don't see what the E2ICS is talking about if it's not talking about mass dilation. The informational equivalent, if it's talking about rest mass, is basically to say that hyperdrive works by jumping past lightspeed.
Which is precisely what Dr. Saxton proposes. The passage about maintaining the complex mass has nothing to do with relativistic dilation, and is included in order to show how the idea does not violate the First Law of Thermodynamics.
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Post by Illuminatus Primus »

Indeed; check the website Tech Commentaries.

He doesn't really offer much behind the mechanism (because it's not really possible) other than he suggests some quantum mechanical effect jumps the velocity from below c to above it without accelerating in between (which is obviously not possible) while maintaining the overall magnitude of the complex mass, which therefore makes it consistent with the First Law.
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Post by Illuminatus Primus »

Dr. Curtis Saxton, Ph.D. wrote:A starship can exist comfortably above or below lightspeed but cannot pass through lightspeed via ordinary physical means. However all of ordinary physical existence becomes imprecisely defined below a certain subatomic scale, and we can speculate that this may have something to do with the super-technology that permits hyperdrive in STAR WARS. The leap beyond the lightspeed may be an event which exploits some kind of quantum-mechanical effect in order to slip from subluminal to superluminal speed without ever being at intermediate speeds. As seen by an external observer, the jump must be accomplished within Plank time, a tiny time unit below which time itself becomes meaningless.
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Post by Vympel »

tjhairball, I'm glad to see that you've come back to SDN after Darkstar seems to have closed his board in a fit of pique. You seem like a stand-up guy, irrespective of whether I agree with you.
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Post by tjhairball »

Hm. The website looks like it is referring to general magnitudes of relativistic mass/energy, but at the same time, he seems like he may be aware of the secondary systems issues that I mentioned in discussion with somebody over here... he just seems to consider them a factor easily neglected. The website linked also does not at all mention complex or imaginary mass/energy, which the E2ICS does... in turn implying that the E2ICS may not really be talking about the same thing his page is, which would be pretty strange.

I suspect that further progression of the topic beyond the points already given on both sides re: what's really been said (and what the physics says about that) would only result from shaking a great deal of explanation out of Saxton, with the small exception of the note that using equivalent total [relativistic] complex mass/energy instead of simple mass in the math probably produces another cap based on a quick check, although it may not be quite the same cap and I'm feeling too lazy to check the figures this soon after waking up.
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