SVPD wrote:Ok, what is this stuff supposed to be?
Neutronium is a made up scifi term used to describe the material that makes up neutron stars. The correct term is simply "degenerate matter", or if you are talking about the core of the star "strange matter".
I got into an argument with a guy on The Ranger's Glade over general SW vs ST stuff. He claims that there's some kind of planet destroying thingamajigger in "The Doomsday Machine" which he describes
The hull of the ship in question was only destroyed by a warp core explosion going off inside the device. The hull was left completely unscathed.
Nifty little self contradtiction there. It wsn't destroyed, but it was.
And the explosion is question was IIRC stated by Spock in the episode to be ~97 MT. Can someone correct me on tat if I'm wrong?
Neutronium is a theoretical material that would easily resist even the most powerful explosion ever witnessed in SW. It is matter made up entirely of solid neutrons. No gaps, no space between the subatomic particles. Just solidly packed neutrons.
Well, for the middle region of the star this is thouht to be true anyways. The outer layer is just extremely dense normal matter, the middle (and bulk of the star) is a bunch of neutrons, the heart of the star the matter has reached the point where their quarks all spin the same way.
Totally unrealistic anywhere outside of the heart of a neutron star
The heart is actually strange matter, or what some scifi series are now calling quarkinum. But again, that is not an actual scientific term.
but in ST it is possible and therefore indestructible for all intents and purposes
Its a heat sink only, it has no material properties. It would behave like a liquid really.
It seemed to me that
a) solid neutronium, if it existed, would have incredible mass and gravity, it would crush anything that tried to work on it
A sufficient amount of it would yes. It would also try to form inso a spherical shape due to its mass.
b) even disregarding that problem, it would have not chemical properties at all, so you couldn't really attach it to anything else
Quite right
c) if it were "indestructible"you couldn't cut or shape it to make anything useful out of it.
Which nicely proves he's full of it.
So what's the deal with neutronium?
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Neutronium
huh, it contradicts my encyclopedia by saying it is an accepted term, and that's the first I've seen anything about hyperons.