shields on the death star?

PSW: discuss Star Wars without "versus" arguments.

Moderator: Vympel

User avatar
Lazarus
Jedi Master
Posts: 1082
Joined: 2006-01-12 02:05pm
Location: Southport, UK
Contact:

Post by Lazarus »

Wyrm wrote:
First off, dearheart, I did NOT say that the shields weren't raised. I just said that, if the shields were raised, that (barring the fighters slipping through holes in the shield) they weren't raised to a high enough level that the fighters, moving at the speed they were, they could weather a trip through the shields with themselves and their human cargo intact.
My apologies, I miss worded what I intended to say. I meant that the shields were not raised past the level at which they would exclude fighters, ie navigational shields. Perhaps this explains the 'double front' quote: the effect of stronger shields on a small area of weaker shields allows penetration?

Do we have any evidence to disprove the idea that the DS can't have its full shields online to a high enough power that they prevent penetration by fighters, AND charge the superlaser at the same time? I can't see how we can disprove this without knowing the power required for the DS shields, as well as the reactor output and superlaser power which we already know?
Image
Image
User avatar
Aquatain
Padawan Learner
Posts: 294
Joined: 2004-11-02 07:13am
Location: Ever Expanding Empire of Denmark

Post by Aquatain »

Lazarus wrote:Wyrm wrote:

My apologies, I miss worded what I intended to say. I meant that the shields were not raised past the level at which they would exclude fighters, ie navigational shields. Perhaps this explains the 'double front' quote: the effect of stronger shields on a small area of weaker shields allows penetration?
This seems to be supported by the script :

INTERIOR LUKE'S X-WING FIGHTER - COCKPIT

Luke adjusts his controls as he concentrates on the approaching Death Star. The ship begins to be buffeted slightly.

RED LEADER: (over headset) Switch your deflectors on.

INTERIOR: ANOTHER COCKPIT

RED LEADER (over headset) Double front!
There Lives More Faith In Honest Doubt,Belive Me,Than In Half The Creeds. ~ Alfred Lord Tennyson.

"The two most common elements in the universe are Hydrogen and stupidity."
ecintron
Redshirt
Posts: 20
Joined: 2006-04-07 04:24pm

Post by ecintron »

Aquatain wrote:
Lazarus wrote:Wyrm wrote:

My apologies, I miss worded what I intended to say. I meant that the shields were not raised past the level at which they would exclude fighters, ie navigational shields. Perhaps this explains the 'double front' quote: the effect of stronger shields on a small area of weaker shields allows penetration?
This seems to be supported by the script :

INTERIOR LUKE'S X-WING FIGHTER - COCKPIT

Luke adjusts his controls as he concentrates on the approaching Death Star. The ship begins to be buffeted slightly.

RED LEADER: (over headset) Switch your deflectors on.

INTERIOR: ANOTHER COCKPIT

RED LEADER (over headset) Double front!



Alway figure that the death star I had 3 types of shields, Particle shields that was skin tight , hugging the surface of the DS1 and that the exhaust vent lacked... as per the briefing. Ray shields that in this case was also also skin tight, and the magnetic shield which the fighter deflectors needed the double front to get thru.

Very likely the magnetic shield was some kind of navigation or meteor shield use to deflect pieces of planets that would been hurl the deathstar way when she blow them up.

While the Planetary shield unit would perform all three function, it would have prevent firing of weapons unless holes where open up, which would have also exposed the deathstar to counter attack.

In the case of Deathstar II they may have open such holes to use the superlaser against the rebel fleet, but the due to the jamming the rebel would not have detect when they holes appear to use them to attack the second deathstar..
User avatar
nightmare
Jedi Council Member
Posts: 1539
Joined: 2002-07-26 11:07am
Location: Here. Sometimes there.

Post by nightmare »

Lazarus wrote:Do we have any evidence to disprove the idea that the DS can't have its full shields online to a high enough power that they prevent penetration by fighters, AND charge the superlaser at the same time? I can't see how we can disprove this without knowing the power required for the DS shields, as well as the reactor output and superlaser power which we already know?
Of course not, you're asking us to prove a negative. If you want to claim that the DS can't have both it's superlaser and shields online at the same time, you have to provide evidence FOR this conclusion. It cannot be accepted as a premise.
Star Trek vs. Star Wars, Extralife style.
User avatar
Wyrm
Jedi Council Member
Posts: 2206
Joined: 2005-09-02 01:10pm
Location: In the sand, pooping hallucinogenic goodness.

Post by Wyrm »

ecintron wrote:Alway figure that the death star I had 3 types of shields, Particle shields that was skin tight , hugging the surface of the DS1 and that the exhaust vent lacked... as per the briefing. Ray shields that in this case was also also skin tight, and the magnetic shield which the fighter deflectors needed the double front to get thru.

Very likely the magnetic shield was some kind of navigation or meteor shield use to deflect pieces of planets that would been hurl the deathstar way when she blow them up.
It would make perfect sense for the DS to have many layers of defense, including an overall particle shield to protect against planetary debris, overall ray shields to protect against capital ship fire, and assorted individual ray and particle shields protecting vital parts of the DS surface, including that pesky thermal exhaust port.
ecintron wrote:While the Planetary shield unit would perform all three function, it would have prevent firing of weapons unless holes where open up, which would have also exposed the deathstar to counter attack.

In the case of Deathstar II they may have open such holes to use the superlaser against the rebel fleet, but the due to the jamming the rebel would not have detect when they holes appear to use them to attack the second deathstar..
One. Way. Shields. Dumbass.
Darth Wong on Strollers vs. Assholes: "There were days when I wished that my stroller had weapons on it."
wilfulton on Bible genetics: "If two screaming lunatics copulate in front of another screaming lunatic, the result will be yet another screaming lunatic. 8)"
SirNitram: "The nation of France is a theory, not a fact. It should therefore be approached with an open mind, and critically debated and considered."

Cornivore! | BAN-WATCH CANE: XVII | WWJDFAKB? - What Would Jesus Do... For a Klondike Bar? | Evil Bayesian Conspiracy
User avatar
Spartan
Jedi Knight
Posts: 678
Joined: 2002-09-12 08:25pm
Location: Chicago, Il

Post by Spartan »

Which would be extremely retarded by the way, as we know that the shields and easily be maintained while the superlaser is charging. As I already pointed out. Mind you that the Deathstar also had enough power to maintain a powered orbit around Yavin at the same time, and accelerating at an estimated 100 G's!.

ROTS: ICS states that shields have to be maintained while in hyperspace, to prevent fatal collisions with interstellar gas and dust. So, are we to believe that they subsequently dropped their shields to for know sane reason, only to raise them again before just before they fire?

If they intend to survive their own superlaser blast they're going to want something a bit more effective than naviagtional shileds that are designed to block and shunt aside gas and dust.

That their are either weakened interference zones, read "holes" that a capital ship could not exploit. Is far more plausible than the Deathstar flying in unprepared. We already have a ready made explanation from TPM anyway is you move slow enough you can walk or fly right through the shield interface.
"The enemy outnumbers us a paltry three to one. Good odds for any Greek...."

"Spartans. Ready your breakfast and eat hearty--For tonight we dine in hell!" ~ King Leonidas of Sparta.
User avatar
Lazarus
Jedi Master
Posts: 1082
Joined: 2006-01-12 02:05pm
Location: Southport, UK
Contact:

Post by Lazarus »

How is the holes idea more plausable? If you apply it to the DS, then you have to apply it universally, else such a system would not be in place on the DS. This means that every single shield system which involves mutliple projectors will have holes in it. If this is the case, why are they never mentioned in any canon, official or apocrypha anywhere? Why are they never exploited? On Bothawui in Specter/Vision why were fighters not flown through them? In Solo Command, why were fighters not flown through the gaps to hit the projectors? In Wedge's Gamble, how could ships be trapped between the shield layers on Coruscant if there were gaps? BECAUSE THERE ARE NO GAPS!

'Holes' are NOT more reasonable than suggesting that the shields on the DS were not up to full power, such an explanation has too many far reaching consequences. I can accept that interference zones may exist between the shield sectors, but these are not holes, they are regions of 20% reduction in power.

We know Tarkin was an overconfidant idiot: He failed to launch the fighters at his disposal, he entered the system on the far side of Yavin instead of on the side of Yavin 4, he didn't open fire on the fighters until close range where his weapons were weak and probably other mistakes. Can we not just add to this list that he did not bring the shields up to full power? He would have had 20 seconds after the blast to raise shields, which could have been done. This explanation has no consequences outside ANH, and is not contradicted by other evidence and inferences. THIS is a reasonable explanation.
Image
Image
User avatar
Connor MacLeod
Sith Apprentice
Posts: 14065
Joined: 2002-08-01 05:03pm
Contact:

Post by Connor MacLeod »

ANH novel, page 180 wrote: "The station," Dodonna went on, "is heavily shielded and mounts more firepower than half the Imperial fleet. But its defenses were designed to fend off large-scale, capital ship assaults. A small, one- or two-man fighter should be able to slip through its defensive screens."
ANH novel, Page 189 wrote: "We're passing through their outer shields. Hodl tight. Lock down freeze-floating controls and switch your own deflectors on, ,double front."[
Again, its evident that the evidence is being deliberately ignored simply because people "don't like it". :roll:

(PS: I want to see evidence for "one way" shields, BTW, sincee I know of no evidence supporting that.)
ecintron
Redshirt
Posts: 20
Joined: 2006-04-07 04:24pm

Post by ecintron »

Wyrm wrote:
ecintron wrote:Alway figure that the death star I had 3 types of shields, Particle shields that was skin tight , hugging the surface of the DS1 and that the exhaust vent lacked... as per the briefing. Ray shields that in this case was also also skin tight, and the magnetic shield which the fighter deflectors needed the double front to get thru.

Very likely the magnetic shield was some kind of navigation or meteor shield use to deflect pieces of planets that would been hurl the deathstar way when she blow them up.
It would make perfect sense for the DS to have many layers of defense, including an overall particle shield to protect against planetary debris, overall ray shields to protect against capital ship fire, and assorted individual ray and particle shields protecting vital parts of the DS surface, including that pesky thermal exhaust port.
ecintron wrote:While the Planetary shield unit would perform all three function, it would have prevent firing of weapons unless holes where open up, which would have also exposed the deathstar to counter attack.

In the case of Deathstar II they may have open such holes to use the superlaser against the rebel fleet, but the due to the jamming the rebel would not have detect when they holes appear to use them to attack the second deathstar..
One. Way. Shields. Dumbass.
Any proof of that moron!!! The threater shield at Hoth had to be open to fire thru !!!!

In the "Black Fleet Crisis" The hypervelocity cannon threater shield also had to have a hole in order to shoot thru, it was the same hole that the Ewing used to take it out...

So unless you have proof, I keep the insult to myself..dumshit
User avatar
Wyrm
Jedi Council Member
Posts: 2206
Joined: 2005-09-02 01:10pm
Location: In the sand, pooping hallucinogenic goodness.

Post by Wyrm »

Spartan wrote:Which would be extremely retarded by the way, as we know that the shields and easily be maintained while the superlaser is charging. As I already pointed out. Mind you that the Deathstar also had enough power to maintain a powered orbit around Yavin at the same time, and accelerating at an estimated 100 G's!
I'm beginning to think that this speaks against there being holes in the shield left in purposefully to save energy. If you can afford to cover a substantial fraction of the DS with your overpowered reactor, why not go for the whole banana?

Please note that there might be holes for other reasons.
Spartan wrote:ROTS: ICS states that shields have to be maintained while in hyperspace, to prevent fatal collisions with interstellar gas and dust. So, are we to believe that they subsequently dropped their shields to for know sane reason, only to raise them again before just before they fire?
To give a sense of how (not very) powerful these "navigational deflectors" would have to be, I submit the following calculation.

Typical hyperdrive velocities are on the order of 10 million c. Assuming that relativistic kinetic energy law still applies (assuming that the mass becomes imaginary with v > c), then at very high multiples of c, kinetic energy is approximately

KE ≅ mc³/v

(This is because the relativistic KE equation is KE = mc²γ, where γ = 1/\sqrt{1-(v²/c²)}, and when v << c, mγ ≅ |m|c/v.)

Below the speed of light, kinetic energy goes as the familiar KE = 1/2 m v², so to first order, the kinetic energy of a ship traveling at hyperspeed is about equal to the same ship traveling at υ, which is

1/2 m υ² = mc³/v
υ² = 2c³/v
υ = \sqrt{2c³/v} = c \sqrt{2c/v}

So if the DS is puttering along at v = 10 million c, then it's effective sublight speed υ is \sqrt{2e-7} c ≈ 134.0713 km/s. Similarly, any gas and dust will have kinetic energies corresponding to similar velocities.

Now, going to ANH and the scene cited by Aquatain, where the Rebel squad starts getting buffetted by outside forces (and also the shield), I estimate the DS as 2" in diameter on my computer screen in the shot immediately preceeding this (measured with a piece of floss and 1/4" graph paper -- they were the only tools I had handy, all right?). Since I sit about 19.25" away from the screen, half of the DS I subtends 0.0519014 radians of the field of view. Therefore, if we use 160 km as the true size of the DS, the fighters must be 3,080 km away when they reached the outer echelons of the DS's shields (according to the novel, cited by Sen. MacLeod). So the face-on profile of the DS's shields is a maximum of ~3,080 km in radius. (Yikes!) This means that, going at 10 million c, the DS plows through 8.934536e+28 cubic meters of space per second.

Now, the lowest density of interstellar gas is approximately 0.1 atoms per cubic centimeter, and there are 1e6 cubic centimeters in a cubic meter, so the DS plows through 8.934536e+33 atoms of interstellar gas each second, or 14.836e9 mols of interstellar gas. Since this is mostly hydrogen, this amounts to plowing through 14.953 Gg/s of hydrogen going 134.0713 km/s, so this is 134.3994 PW, or 32.12223 megatons per second.

Note that this is over the entire profile area of the shield (2.980240e+13 m²), so each square meter only receives about 4.5 kW of impact damage. In contrast, the Earth receives 1.366 kW of solar energy per square meter.

(The stopping power of that interstellar gas is approximately mc. That means that those 23.71962 kg/s of hydrogen gas impacitng the surface of the shield will be stripping the DS of 7.110e9 kg m/s of momentum each second. Of course, if we approximate the DS as a solid iron ball 80 km in radius (~1.685703e+19 kg), this amounts to 4.217825e-10 m/s "slowing" each second.)

It makes no sense to drop these shields after emerging from hyperspace. The required energy density does seem piddling compared to the kind of firepower that a Rebel fighter would be expected to turn. Putting up doubled shields in front would probably allow them to bully through a deflector powered to navigational deflection levels.

Also, I'd like to note that the Rebel fighters stopped buffeting by the time the DS I reached 7" in diameter onscreen (WARNING: Mk I eyeball returns! The DS ran off the edge of the screen, so I extrapolated where the equatorial curve would've met a diameter drawn from the other end), which to first approximation means that the fighters stopped buffetting at around 880 km away, so the DS's outer shields might have been as much as 2200 km thick! If we believe the DVD counter, the transition took 7.5 seconds, for an average velocity of 293.3333 km/s for the fighters (which, I note, is the same order of magnitude as the "effective sublight speed" that the navigational deflectors are defending against, and are greater even).
Lazarus wrote:How is the holes idea more plausable? If you apply it to the DS, then you have to apply it universally, else such a system would not be in place on the DS. This means that every single shield system which involves mutliple projectors will have holes in it. If this is the case, why are they never mentioned in any canon, official or apocrypha anywhere? Why are they never exploited? On Bothawui in Specter/Vision why were fighters not flown through them? In Solo Command, why were fighters not flown through the gaps to hit the projectors? In Wedge's Gamble, how could ships be trapped between the shield layers on Coruscant if there were gaps? BECAUSE THERE ARE NO GAPS!
The outer echelons of the DS's shields is many times the diameter of the DS I itself (compare ~3,080 km to 160 km), and is also a substantial fraction of the planetary radius of an earthlike world. Whereas the Alderaan shield looks like it starts about 1/20th a planetary diameter above Alderaan and extends to about 1/10th a planetary diameter (WARNING: Mk I eyeball!), or starting about 318.6399 km above the surface and ending 637.2797 above the surface (assuming Alderaan's radius = 6,372.797 km), or about 318.6399 km thick. This is about a seventh of the thickness of the DS I shield (2200 km). It may be that handling shields about 1/6th a planetary diameter may have been pushing the technology of the time, and that such a configuration was hard to control, leading to many gaps and interference zones. Given more development time, they might have been able to close the gaps (as they seem to have done in Jedi), but for some reason the DS I configuration was stamped "good enough." Of course, the shield's navigational configuration isn't that impressive anyway.
Lazarus wrote:'Holes' are NOT more reasonable than suggesting that the shields on the DS were not up to full power, such an explanation has too many far reaching consequences. I can accept that interference zones may exist between the shield sectors, but these are not holes, they are regions of 20% reduction in power.
You've just graduated to "semantics whore," dearheart. Congradulations. :roll: I think "hole in the shield" neatly encapsulates the meaning of "places in the shield that are substantially weaker than other parts."
Darth Wong on Strollers vs. Assholes: "There were days when I wished that my stroller had weapons on it."
wilfulton on Bible genetics: "If two screaming lunatics copulate in front of another screaming lunatic, the result will be yet another screaming lunatic. 8)"
SirNitram: "The nation of France is a theory, not a fact. It should therefore be approached with an open mind, and critically debated and considered."

Cornivore! | BAN-WATCH CANE: XVII | WWJDFAKB? - What Would Jesus Do... For a Klondike Bar? | Evil Bayesian Conspiracy
User avatar
Wyrm
Jedi Council Member
Posts: 2206
Joined: 2005-09-02 01:10pm
Location: In the sand, pooping hallucinogenic goodness.

Post by Wyrm »

ecintron wrote:Any proof of that moron!!! The threater shield at Hoth had to be open to fire thru !!!!

In the "Black Fleet Crisis" The hypervelocity cannon threater shield also had to have a hole in order to shoot thru, it was the same hole that the Ewing used to take it out...

So unless you have proof, I keep the insult to myself..dumshit
Calm down, son. Connor MacLeod got to this point three hours before you did, and he has much seniority over you, so no three-exclamation-point endings for you. There can be only one! :wink:

Now, although whether SW technology itself has one-way shields is a separate point (and now that Sen. MacLeod has asked the question, I'm beginning to have doubts about their existence myself), I can think of several possibilities why the Hoth theatre shield would've been opened when they were firing that dang ion canon, even if one-way shields were part of the SW toolkit.

First, a correction: the theatre shield at Hoth had to be lowered to pass through. Remember what I said about passing through a powerful shield might not be exactly healthy, a page back? Although projectile weapons used in SW may be hardy enough to pass through a shield if it's traveling in the shield's bias, the same may not be true of a manned ship. It has delicate wetware to protect. The Rebel transport might not have had shields with enough umph to protect its passengers from being fried by going through a theatre shield going full blast.

Second, if the Rebellion scavanged the power generator from a battlecrusier for their Hoth base, how much else did they scavange and are pressing into service for a task they are not specified for, like a theatre shield? Removing the bias from the Hoth shield may have been one of the comprimises made to boost the shield energy.

Third, passing through the shield in the direction of its bias is not free. I have the following proof that if a one-way shield exists, passing through the shield with the bias costs you energy.

Take an insulated cylinder with a piston at one end, and set up a thin, perfect shield that divides the cylinder into two subchambers, labeling the chamber with the piston at the other end A and the chamber without the piston at the end B. Let the shield have a bias from A to B. Let the cylinder be filled with some ideal gas at a uniform initial temperature, T. Raise the shield. Because of the bias, eventually all the molecules from A will go into B and stay there. Suppose the shield adds no energy to the particles as they pass through. Then the change in internal energy of the ideal gas is zero, and therefore its temperature remains the same. Chamber A now has no gas in it, so we can move the piston into the cylinder (without back pressure, so the work put in can be made vanishingly small) until it is sitting just inside the shield. The shield is lowered, and because the shield is perfect, we can recover all the energy we put into it, and the gas presses against the piston again. We put a hot reservoir in contact with chamber B, and let the gas expand isothermally against the piston, letting it do work. Eventually, the piston is back in its original position. We break contact with the hot reservoir, and the cycle is now complete.

Notice that we have just constructed a perfect engine! The engine converts all the heat pumped into it entirely into work. Now, if you hold that the second law of thermodynamics is the same in the SW universe as it is in this universe, then you are forced to conclude that if one-way shields exist, then they must dump energy into outgoing particles. There is, after all, only one other source of energy that the work can come from in the above example, which is the shield.

Now, I haven't gotten as far as showing how much energy is sapped from the shield, but I can immediately see two effects. One is that it's even deadlier exiting a one-way shield than it is entering it. Therefore, one-way fields are only useful to you if the things going out don't mind a little baking. (Humans are not in this catagory.) The exiting transport would bear the brunt of an energy surge from the shield if it were one-way. Since transports are not known for their robust shields, this would be a major concern.

The other effect is less obvious but potentially just as serious, and may address the hypervelocity projectile hole. Every time an object exits your shield, you pay a toll in energy. I've never known the Rebellion for having energy coming out of its ears (at least, compared to the Empire), so they would have to husband their energy very wisely. As for the hypervelocity canon in "Black Fleet Crisis", firing through the shield itself would also cause an energy drain, perhaps massive since we know shields are velocity-sensitive. (Hypervelocity == really goddamned fast!)

The drain from letting turbolasers and proton torpedoes exit a one-way shield with the bias is considered acceptible, but the drain letting a ship or a hypervelocity projectile would be right out!
Darth Wong on Strollers vs. Assholes: "There were days when I wished that my stroller had weapons on it."
wilfulton on Bible genetics: "If two screaming lunatics copulate in front of another screaming lunatic, the result will be yet another screaming lunatic. 8)"
SirNitram: "The nation of France is a theory, not a fact. It should therefore be approached with an open mind, and critically debated and considered."

Cornivore! | BAN-WATCH CANE: XVII | WWJDFAKB? - What Would Jesus Do... For a Klondike Bar? | Evil Bayesian Conspiracy
ecintron
Redshirt
Posts: 20
Joined: 2006-04-07 04:24pm

Post by ecintron »

Wyrm wrote:
ecintron wrote:Any proof of that moron!!! The threater shield at Hoth had to be open to fire thru !!!!

In the "Black Fleet Crisis" The hypervelocity cannon threater shield also had to have a hole in order to shoot thru, it was the same hole that the Ewing used to take it out...

So unless you have proof, I keep the insult to myself..dumshit
Calm down, son. Connor MacLeod got to this point three hours before you did, and he has much seniority over you, so no three-exclamation-point endings for you. There can be only one! :wink:

Now, although whether SW technology itself has one-way shields is a separate point (and now that Sen. MacLeod has asked the question, I'm beginning to have doubts about their existence myself), I can think of several possibilities why the Hoth theatre shield would've been opened when they were firing that dang ion canon, even if one-way shields were part of the SW toolkit.

First, a correction: the theatre shield at Hoth had to be lowered to pass through. Remember what I said about passing through a powerful shield might not be exactly healthy, a page back? Although projectile weapons used in SW may be hardy enough to pass through a shield if it's traveling in the shield's bias, the same may not be true of a manned ship. It has delicate wetware to protect. The Rebel transport might not have had shields with enough umph to protect its passengers from being fried by going through a theatre shield going full blast.

Second, if the Rebellion scavanged the power generator from a battlecrusier for their Hoth base, how much else did they scavange and are pressing into service for a task they are not specified for, like a theatre shield? Removing the bias from the Hoth shield may have been one of the comprimises made to boost the shield energy.

Third, passing through the shield in the direction of its bias is not free. I have the following proof that if a one-way shield exists, passing through the shield with the bias costs you energy.

Take an insulated cylinder with a piston at one end, and set up a thin, perfect shield that divides the cylinder into two subchambers, labeling the chamber with the piston at the other end A and the chamber without the piston at the end B. Let the shield have a bias from A to B. Let the cylinder be filled with some ideal gas at a uniform initial temperature, T. Raise the shield. Because of the bias, eventually all the molecules from A will go into B and stay there. Suppose the shield adds no energy to the particles as they pass through. Then the change in internal energy of the ideal gas is zero, and therefore its temperature remains the same. Chamber A now has no gas in it, so we can move the piston into the cylinder (without back pressure, so the work put in can be made vanishingly small) until it is sitting just inside the shield. The shield is lowered, and because the shield is perfect, we can recover all the energy we put into it, and the gas presses against the piston again. We put a hot reservoir in contact with chamber B, and let the gas expand isothermally against the piston, letting it do work. Eventually, the piston is back in its original position. We break contact with the hot reservoir, and the cycle is now complete.

Notice that we have just constructed a perfect engine! The engine converts all the heat pumped into it entirely into work. Now, if you hold that the second law of thermodynamics is the same in the SW universe as it is in this universe, then you are forced to conclude that if one-way shields exist, then they must dump energy into outgoing particles. There is, after all, only one other source of energy that the work can come from in the above example, which is the shield.

Now, I haven't gotten as far as showing how much energy is sapped from the shield, but I can immediately see two effects. One is that it's even deadlier exiting a one-way shield than it is entering it. Therefore, one-way fields are only useful to you if the things going out don't mind a little baking. (Humans are not in this catagory.) The exiting transport would bear the brunt of an energy surge from the shield if it were one-way. Since transports are not known for their robust shields, this would be a major concern.

The other effect is less obvious but potentially just as serious, and may address the hypervelocity projectile hole. Every time an object exits your shield, you pay a toll in energy. I've never known the Rebellion for having energy coming out of its ears (at least, compared to the Empire), so they would have to husband their energy very wisely. As for the hypervelocity canon in "Black Fleet Crisis", firing through the shield itself would also cause an energy drain, perhaps massive since we know shields are velocity-sensitive. (Hypervelocity == really goddamned fast!)

The drain from letting turbolasers and proton torpedoes exit a one-way shield with the bias is considered acceptible, but the drain letting a ship or a hypervelocity projectile would be right out!

Wow that was one amazing piece of technobabble :roll:


Apparently statements such as "Particle Shield must be drop when launching missiles", from the ICS and SW complete Equipment books would have much more weight than you compeletly off the wall explaination of why this is not possible.

first your theory doesnot provide a mechanism of how shields work, this would be the first place to look inorder to determine whether they would be selective of which direction the passage of energy or even matter is permited.

It far easier to assume that in the case of ship board ray shields that sensors and weapon such as turbo lasers actually stick out of the shield layer. Compare to Planetary units that englobe an entire area and with particle shields their effect actually would be set to interact with matter farther away from a craft to pervent impact of missile or meteor. This can be seem with way object appear to explode before impacting, this would be behind all the statements of having to shut off particle shields.

If you can come up with a mechanism for a one way passage that can be back by Canon statement from either the movie or written works I will be more incline to listen to your Bull... :roll:
User avatar
Lazarus
Jedi Master
Posts: 1082
Joined: 2006-01-12 02:05pm
Location: Southport, UK
Contact:

Post by Lazarus »

Connor wrote:
ANH novel, Page 189 wrote:

"We're passing through their outer shields. Hodl tight. Lock down freeze-floating controls and switch your own deflectors on, ,double front."[


Again, its evident that the evidence is being deliberately ignored simply because people "don't like it". Rolling Eyes

(PS: I want to see evidence for "one way" shields, BTW, sincee I know of no evidence supporting that.)
I am not ignoring this evidence, however this evidence is by no means exact and definite. 'Outer shields' does not specifically mean particle shields; as has already been stated a number of times, it could refer to navigational shields. It has also been suggested that with powerful enough shields of their own, fighters could slip through these navigational shields, as is described in this passage.

Dodonna's mention of 'defensive screens' is again not definately particle shields, and on the outside could even be taken to mean turbolaser defenses and the like.

Wyrm wrote
This is about a seventh of the thickness of the DS I shield (2200 km). It may be that handling shields about 1/6th a planetary diameter may have been pushing the technology of the time, and that such a configuration was hard to control, leading to many gaps and interference zones. Given more development time, they might have been able to close the gaps (as they seem to have done in Jedi), but for some reason the DS I configuration was stamped "good enough." Of course, the shield's navigational configuration isn't that impressive anyway.
I was under the impression that SW technology has plateaud, with new developments being new applications of already established technology, or scaling up of technology? Regardless, I fail to see how these shields could be impervious to capital ships, but not to fighters? We have seen in AotC that smart missiles exist in the SW universe, and their ownership by a bounty hunter suggests they are not all that hard to get hold of. If the Rebels could manage to get a wing of up to date fighters, and later planetary defense weapons, could they not get several of these missiles? Then, could these not be fired through these supposed holes, to do what Skywalker achieved from much shorter range?

Taking your measurements to be reasonably accurate, I fail to see how this thickness changes the situation? I agree that your theory about there being gaps due to such a great thickness is not illogical, but where is the flaw in the idea that the shield had been left up at navigational strength since reversion from hyperspace? This would easily explain the buffeting the fighters experienced, as they slipped through the shield due to their shields being stronger than the particular point where they were passing through the shield. Why do we have to revert to the holes theory?

Wyrm wrote:
I think "hole in the shield" neatly encapsulates the meaning of "places in the shield that are substantially weaker than other parts."
No, it doesn't. For example, a given wall is a foot thick. At one point there is a hole through it, such that you can reach through to the other side. At another point the wall is only half a foot thick, but despite this, you still cannot pass objects through the wall at this point. Are these two points the same? Nope. The interference zones are referred to as being 20% reductions in power, not holes. There is a distinct difference. I fail to see how you could become confused between these two situations, as they are quite clearly different.

Wyrm, I agree with your analysis of possible one way shields, if I understand it correctly! An example of this could be from HttE, where hangar bay shields are dropped to allow the TIE fighters through, because if they were left up, then some considerable harm would befall the ships pilots. However, throughout the series the Chimaera fires its weapons whilst its shields are up, and this state of affairs is continued through every instance of space combat I can think of. Random example-the attack on the Lusankya in The Bacta War: the Lusankya's shields are up, however it is described as firing waves of turbolaser and iron cannon blasts towards the attacking craft. If there were independant shields for each weapon, which would be dropped as the weapon fired, then there would be some sort of patchwork of shields in operation. This is clearly not the case, as the Lusankya's shields are said to consist of 6 individual shields: Forward, Aft, Port, Starboard, Dorsal, Ventral.

It isn't really practical for the turbolasers etc to 'poke through' the shields, because they are turret mounted, and besides I don't see how this would physically work given the hypothesised properties of shields.
Image
Image
ecintron
Redshirt
Posts: 20
Joined: 2006-04-07 04:24pm

Post by ecintron »

Lazarus wrote:Connor wrote:
ANH novel, Page 189 wrote:

"We're passing through their outer shields. Hodl tight. Lock down freeze-floating controls and switch your own deflectors on, ,double front."[


Again, its evident that the evidence is being deliberately ignored simply because people "don't like it". Rolling Eyes

(PS: I want to see evidence for "one way" shields, BTW, sincee I know of no evidence supporting that.)
I am not ignoring this evidence, however this evidence is by no means exact and definite. 'Outer shields' does not specifically mean particle shields; as has already been stated a number of times, it could refer to navigational shields. It has also been suggested that with powerful enough shields of their own, fighters could slip through these navigational shields, as is described in this passage.

Dodonna's mention of 'defensive screens' is again not definately particle shields, and on the outside could even be taken to mean turbolaser defenses and the like.

Wyrm wrote
This is about a seventh of the thickness of the DS I shield (2200 km). It may be that handling shields about 1/6th a planetary diameter may have been pushing the technology of the time, and that such a configuration was hard to control, leading to many gaps and interference zones. Given more development time, they might have been able to close the gaps (as they seem to have done in Jedi), but for some reason the DS I configuration was stamped "good enough." Of course, the shield's navigational configuration isn't that impressive anyway.
I was under the impression that SW technology has plateaud, with new developments being new applications of already established technology, or scaling up of technology? Regardless, I fail to see how these shields could be impervious to capital ships, but not to fighters? We have seen in AotC that smart missiles exist in the SW universe, and their ownership by a bounty hunter suggests they are not all that hard to get hold of. If the Rebels could manage to get a wing of up to date fighters, and later planetary defense weapons, could they not get several of these missiles? Then, could these not be fired through these supposed holes, to do what Skywalker achieved from much shorter range?

Taking your measurements to be reasonably accurate, I fail to see how this thickness changes the situation? I agree that your theory about there being gaps due to such a great thickness is not illogical, but where is the flaw in the idea that the shield had been left up at navigational strength since reversion from hyperspace? This would easily explain the buffeting the fighters experienced, as they slipped through the shield due to their shields being stronger than the particular point where they were passing through the shield. Why do we have to revert to the holes theory?

Wyrm wrote:
I think "hole in the shield" neatly encapsulates the meaning of "places in the shield that are substantially weaker than other parts."
No, it doesn't. For example, a given wall is a foot thick. At one point there is a hole through it, such that you can reach through to the other side. At another point the wall is only half a foot thick, but despite this, you still cannot pass objects through the wall at this point. Are these two points the same? Nope. The interference zones are referred to as being 20% reductions in power, not holes. There is a distinct difference. I fail to see how you could become confused between these two situations, as they are quite clearly different.

Wyrm, I agree with your analysis of possible one way shields, if I understand it correctly! An example of this could be from HttE, where hangar bay shields are dropped to allow the TIE fighters through, because if they were left up, then some considerable harm would befall the ships pilots. However, throughout the series the Chimaera fires its weapons whilst its shields are up, and this state of affairs is continued through every instance of space combat I can think of. Random example-the attack on the Lusankya in The Bacta War: the Lusankya's shields are up, however it is described as firing waves of turbolaser and iron cannon blasts towards the attacking craft. If there were independant shields for each weapon, which would be dropped as the weapon fired, then there would be some sort of patchwork of shields in operation. This is clearly not the case, as the Lusankya's shields are said to consist of 6 individual shields: Forward, Aft, Port, Starboard, Dorsal, Ventral.

It isn't really practical for the turbolasers etc to 'poke through' the shields, because they are turret mounted, and besides I don't see how this would physically work given the hypothesised properties of shields.
the speech about defenses being gear toward capital ship had nothing to do with Force fields but the turbo laser batteries and other weapon batteries that were design to track less agile capital ships..

fighter could maneuver fast enought and get close enought to prevent the batteries from tracking accurately and this is pointed out in the Novel:

"Source: ANH novelization p.192

"Lord Vader, we count at least thirty of them, of two types. They are so small and quick the fixed guns cannot follow them accurately. They continuously evade the predictors."

The magnetic shields where never meant to be combat shield or the fighter would have never gotten thru them as it was they needed to double their forward shields to punch thru them..

The magnetic shield would have been design only to block solid matter and would have been no defense again energy weapon that would have past freely thru them.

This is different from the planetary shield at Endor that was design to block both matter and energy, and that why a hole was needed!

As for the hanger bay, you have no proof that they are one way, for all we know they depressurize the hanger bay when launching craft from them.

The only example of transport thru the hanger bay shield is that from TPM when Ankin starfighter manages to enter the hanger bay and from all indication the hanger bay shields were off to allow fighters to enter and exist the bay during combat due to the fact that the Droid fighter used chemical slugs to create thrust and had to refuel constantly during prolong combat

As for the turrets, they very well may lie out side the Rayshield altogether as there are various reference to them having special type of armor to protect them from turboblaster, the ICS ANH refer to it as "antiproton armor" and other sources as " Quadanium Steel Hull Plating", which was also mention as the hull material of the death star which was said to be protection against turbolaser..

As for smart missile, we saw that the level of jamming that the deathstar put out make it impossible for them to get a lock, even targeting from the trench impossible, only by using the force was Luke able to make that shot..
User avatar
Connor MacLeod
Sith Apprentice
Posts: 14065
Joined: 2002-08-01 05:03pm
Contact:

Post by Connor MacLeod »

Lazarus wrote: I am not ignoring this evidence, however this evidence is by no means exact and definite.
So its not "ignoring" evidence so much as nitpicking? My, that's SO much better. :roll: Tell you what. Since you're SO convinced your theory is right, I want to see your proof to back it up.
'Outer shields' does not specifically mean particle shields; as has already been stated a number of times, it could refer to navigational shields.
Dodonna's quotes make it clear they're referring to combat shields, even though you (again) choose to ignore blatant evidence contradictory to your own opinion. Moreover, according to the EGW&T, particle shields are kept powered at all times, suggesting there is no discernable difference between "navigational" and "particle" shielding. (Tyrant's test expands on this to suggest that all craft utilize at least some minimal form of ray and particle shielding for protection during interstellar travel.)

So basically if oyu want to claim they're "navigational shields", provide the evidence to back that up.
It has also been suggested that with powerful enough shields of their own, fighters could slip through these navigational shields, as is described in this passage.
Which would be possible given the "interferencee" example from Tyrant's Test (although if they were doing that, one wonders why they would "double front" their shields, since that would leave their aft exposed while passing through the shield volume.)

In any case, there is still the reference to countermeasures in the Radio drama (gee, wasn't that somethign else you ignored?)

In any event "using fighter shields to pass through other ship's shields" does not itself invalidate the fact that shields can and do have gaps and/or weak spots in them. (IF anything, it simply reinforces my argument.)
Dodonna's mention of 'defensive screens' is again not definately particle shields, and on the outside could even be taken to mean turbolaser defenses and the like.
Prove it's not. I'm getting tired of your ignoring evidence and using speculative bullshit in place of actual proof. The novel mentions buffeting as they pass through the "outer shields', which would suggest they ARE particle shields (you know, because particle shields interfere with physical impactors? Ray shields don't. Or are you going to invent a totally new form of shield and thus further complicate your already-complicated bullshit?)
User avatar
Lazarus
Jedi Master
Posts: 1082
Joined: 2006-01-12 02:05pm
Location: Southport, UK
Contact:

Post by Lazarus »

Having re-watched the relavent scenes in ANH, here is the dialogue which could concern the DS shields, in chronological order:

Yavin briefing:

Dodonna- The battlestation is heavily shielded, and carries a firepower greater than half the starfleet. It's defenses are designed around a direct, large scale assault. A small, one man fighter should be able to penetrate the outer defense.
Pilot- Pardon me for asking sir, but what good are our snubfighters going to be against that?
Dodonna- The Empire doesn't consider a small, one man fighter to be any threat, or they'd have a tighter defense'


Beginning of the DS attack:

*Buffeting begins*
Pilot- We're passing through their magnetic field
Red Leader- Hold on tight
Pilot- Switch your deflectors on, double front.


Dodonna says that a fighter should be able to penetrate the outer defense. I agree, this could be taken to mean that, due to their size, the fighters could slip through the gaps in the shields, however this is interpretation, not hard evidence. I fail to see how it is 'clear' he is refering to combat shielding, indeed the only point where he directly mentions shields is when he says that the shields are heavy.

He makes a reference to a 'tighter defense'. This could refer to any number of specific things, including shields, point defense weapons, TIE patrols, escort craft etc.

Now here's something interesting in the chronological setup during the attack. The turbulence around the fighters begins, THEN the reference is made to a 'magnetic field', and THEN the order is given to switch deflectors on, double front. Consequently, the double front order cannot have been given so that the fighters could pass through the shield, although it may have been a compensation measure, it was not necessary.

I also point you towards this description of particle shields from the EGtWaT, which has multiple interesting points:
'These shields greatly enhance a ship's hull integrity by using energy charges to strengthen the molecular bonds of the hull plating. They are kept powered at all times to defeat micrometeors and other small particles. Ships must lower their particle shields when launching carried craft or firing their own physical weapons. Computers are used to drop and raise the shields with microsecond precision in order to leave the ship vulnerable for only a minimal time'

First, it is stated that particle shields are skin tight, so the fighters cannot have been passing through such shields on the DS attack. Second, it states that particle shields are in fact not one way, and so I admit my mistake on that matter, my apologies. The same does not apply to ray shields though.

The book also describes ray shields:
'Ray shields will absorb blasts from laser cannons, turbolasers and other energy weapons. Since these shields consume a tremendous amount of energy, they are raised only when battle is imminent. Shield energy permeates the ship's hull and wraps the vessel in layers of energy that may extend anywhere from a few millimetres to several centimetres away from the hull. (An energy shield carries so much power that touching one can be fatal).

Several things are clear here. Firstly, ray shields do in fact take a lot of power, and so Tarkin may well have not bothered to power them up to combat levels. The Particle shields are what would have been key in stopping the debris from Yavin anyway. Furthermore, it shows that these shields are also skin tight, so the fighters cannot have been passing through gaps in these, based on this description alone. However, I am aware of other descriptions of Ray shields being bubble-like. Perhaps their configuration can be altered to be further from the hull?

This leaves us with the option stated earlier, that the DS has acquired its own Van Allen belt, and other such fields associated with large planetoids, especially since the DS is mostly metallic in composition. This explains how Luke's strafing run caused some damage. The thermal exhaust port had its own independant ray shield generator, but no particle shielding, would this be to allow the reactor waste out perhaps?

Wyrm's hugely thick shield theory was based on the idea that the 'magnetic field' was a shield of some sort. The description of shields above suggests otherwise, coupled with the fact that the turbulence begins a short while before any reference is made to the field, and the order given to switch deflectors on. I say again, the fighters did NOT have their shields up as they went into the field. If it was a particle shield, this would obviously have been suicidal.

Connor, I have only heard a few episodes of the radio drama, so I apologise if I seemed to be ignoring it as evidence, I assure you this was not my intention. Please post the relevant quote if possible.
Image
Image
User avatar
Wyrm
Jedi Council Member
Posts: 2206
Joined: 2005-09-02 01:10pm
Location: In the sand, pooping hallucinogenic goodness.

Post by Wyrm »

Learn to edit quotes, dearheart.
ecintron wrote:<snip snip>

Apparently statements such as "Particle Shield must be drop when launching missiles", from the ICS and SW complete Equipment books would have much more weight than you compeletly off the wall explaination of why this is not possible.
First: Yes, of course the ICS has more weight than my arguments. However, due to the fact that I'm currently in a book black hole (there isn't a decent hobby store that would sell the ICS for literally ten miles) and lack of prior interest in the subject, I do not own any ICS or complete equipment books. I've only just begun to build my collection, and it's slow going at best.

Second: The only thing I did was provide possible counters of why, if the SW universe indeed has one-way particle shields, that Hoth and the hypervelocity canon installation did not. Showing that a few selected examples of particle shields not being one-way does not mean that all particle shields share that property. On the other hand, the ICS statement is a sweeping statement on the nature of the particle shield, and is far more conclusive.

Third: The ICS says that "Particle Shield must be drop when launching missiles", which singles out particle shields as having a disadvantage. Is there a similar statement on ray shielding in the ICS?
first your theory doesnot provide a mechanism of how shields work, this would be the first place to look inorder to determine whether they would be selective of which direction the passage of energy or even matter is permited.
Obviously, you can't tell the difference between a theory that states the physical consequences of shields being one-way and a theory that shields are one way. I didn't say that particle shields could be one-way; I said if particle shields can be one-way, then that fact must have these consequences, therefore it makes sense that Hoth's shield wasn't one-way, because otherwise such-and-such would happen.

I don't need a specific mechanism of how a shield can be one-way to consider the physical consequences of a shield being one-way.
It far easier to assume that in the case of ship board ray shields that sensors and weapon such as turbo lasers actually stick out of the shield layer.
The jury's still out on that. At least one prominent member on SDN believes that there are one-way shields, Ender, who in a recent thread made a direct statement on this. If ray shields can be one way, then ships can exploit this property by not leaving their guns vulnerable.
If you can come up with a mechanism for a one way passage that can be back by Canon statement from either the movie or written works I will be more incline to listen to your Bull... :roll:
Learn to read:
Previously, I wrote:Now, although whether SW technology itself has one-way shields is a separate point (and now that Sen. MacLeod has asked the question, I'm beginning to have doubts about their existence myself), I can think of several possibilities why the Hoth theatre shield would've been opened when they were firing that dang ion canon, even if one-way shields were part of the SW toolkit.
This is a clear invokation of "Let's pretend that it is true that there exists one-way shields in SW for a while. Why did the Hoth shield need to be lowered for the escaping transports, and why did the HV canon had to fire out a hole?"

Twit.
Darth Wong on Strollers vs. Assholes: "There were days when I wished that my stroller had weapons on it."
wilfulton on Bible genetics: "If two screaming lunatics copulate in front of another screaming lunatic, the result will be yet another screaming lunatic. 8)"
SirNitram: "The nation of France is a theory, not a fact. It should therefore be approached with an open mind, and critically debated and considered."

Cornivore! | BAN-WATCH CANE: XVII | WWJDFAKB? - What Would Jesus Do... For a Klondike Bar? | Evil Bayesian Conspiracy
User avatar
NRS Guardian
Jedi Knight
Posts: 531
Joined: 2004-09-11 09:11pm
Location: Colorado

Post by NRS Guardian »

Lazarus wrote:snip.
First of all what is observed in the movies suggests that the EGtW&T is wrong concerning particle shields because the observed operation of particles shields is that they are volumetric like RL EM fields or atmosphere. Second as the EGtW&T says ray shields stop energy not physical objects, plus if you're going into a combat situation you're going to want to raise your ray shields to stop any planetary or capship fire(just in case). Also, in the ANH novelization I think it mentioned that the only way to attack the exhaust port was firing a missile as Luke did at a 90 degree angle to the port I'll have to look it up when I get home. This would mean it would be extremely difficult for a capship fired missile to do it plus there's the fact that capship missiles tend to be larger than the 2m port so there's reasons besides shields why a capship couldn't do what Luke did.

The way I see particle shields is they're rather like a protective atmosphere where it's thickest at the surface and grows more difuse as distance from the surface increases, however the greater the depth the stronger it is at the surface and the more volume there is to stop stuff. Also the more power is put into the shield the thicker the field is, so by decreasing power the field can be made thinner and more easily penetrated. Thus by lowering the energy the field is thinned allowing stuff to more easily approach and enter. In additon while it's thickest at the surface the closer you are to the hull the less shield you have to go through to get at the hull. Also, like an atmosphere if you hit it at a great enough speed or steep enough angle you're going to be stopped by it, however the thinner it is the faster and steeper you can go through it. Thus probably what people in-universe mean when they talk about holes is that at a reasonable speed you can penetrate the shield while not having to worry about missiles or fighters coming at your "unprotected hull" at fractions of c. Especially considering you "lower" your shields to allow fighters and missiles to launch and fighters to come aboard, all relatively low speed events.

Connor already provided the quote from the radio drama IIRC two or three pages back thus his charge of ignoring evidence.
"It is not necessary to hope in order to persevere."
-William of Nassau, Prince of Orange

Economic Left/Right: 0.88
Social Libertarian/Authoritarian: 2.10
User avatar
Connor MacLeod
Sith Apprentice
Posts: 14065
Joined: 2002-08-01 05:03pm
Contact:

Post by Connor MacLeod »

Lazarus wrote: Dodonna says that a fighter should be able to penetrate the outer defense. I agree, this could be taken to mean that, due to their size, the fighters could slip through the gaps in the shields, however this is interpretation, not hard evidence. I fail to see how it is 'clear' he is refering to combat shielding, indeed the only point where he directly mentions shields is when he says that the shields are heavy.
Except that we have the novelization (something which you appare to be ignoring in this instance.) to tell us what he is referring to. I've got hte novel, you have nothing to back up your interpretation. Thus you lose. Don't you know how evidence works?
He makes a reference to a 'tighter defense'. This could refer to any number of specific things, including shields, point defense weapons, TIE patrols, escort craft etc.
Mindless appeals to "might be's" in the face of concrete evidence is rather dishonest behaviour you know (and it sort of disproves your claims you're not "ignoring evidence." :roll:)
Now here's something interesting in the chronological setup during the attack. The turbulence around the fighters begins, THEN the reference is made to a 'magnetic field', and THEN the order is given to switch deflectors on, double front. Consequently, the double front order cannot have been given so that the fighters could pass through the shield, although it may have been a compensation measure, it was not necessary.
Hardly relevant to my case, since I wasn't relying on the activation or doubling up of the shields in order to allow penetration (it doesn't hurt my case either.)
I also point you towards this description of particle shields from the EGtWaT, which has multiple interesting points:
'These shields greatly enhance a ship's hull integrity by using energy charges to strengthen the molecular bonds of the hull plating. They are kept powered at all times to defeat micrometeors and other small particles. Ships must lower their particle shields when launching carried craft or firing their own physical weapons. Computers are used to drop and raise the shields with microsecond precision in order to leave the ship vulnerable for only a minimal time'

First, it is stated that particle shields are skin tight, so the fighters cannot have been passing through such shields on the DS attack. Second, it states that particle shields are in fact not one way, and so I admit my mistake on that matter, my apologies. The same does not apply to ray shields though.
Point out to me where it says "skin tight" If it were skin tight, then there would be no reason to lower them to allow objects to pass through. Moreover, we know from Courtship of Princess Leia and Rogue Squadron (1st book) that particle shields CAN extend outwards beyond the ship (The Falcon's shields were 50 meters out when Luke launched concussion missiles at a Nightsister shuttle in Courtship, for example.)

If you're referring to the "enhancing hull integrity", then you clearly do not understand what the passage is saying. deflection of projectiles or absorption of energy (another thing mentioned by the EGW&T entry) is a different mechnaism from structural reinforcement. In fact, if you read the revised EGW&T, they make a clear distinction between the two mechanisms. Behind the Magic also makes this distinction.;

Basically, your first point is completely and utterly wrong.
The book also describes ray shields:
'Ray shields will absorb blasts from laser cannons, turbolasers and other energy weapons. Since these shields consume a tremendous amount of energy, they are raised only when battle is imminent. Shield energy permeates the ship's hull and wraps the vessel in layers of energy that may extend anywhere from a few millimetres to several centimetres away from the hull. (An energy shield carries so much power that touching one can be fatal).

Several things are clear here. Firstly, ray shields do in fact take a lot of power, and so Tarkin may well have not bothered to power them up to combat levels. The Particle shields are what would have been key in stopping the debris from Yavin anyway. Furthermore, it shows that these shields are also skin tight, so the fighters cannot have been passing through gaps in these, based on this description alone. However, I am aware of other descriptions of Ray shields being bubble-like. Perhaps their configuration can be altered to be further from the hull?
Given that I've already stated that shields are dynamic (and that we know of references that they can extend some distance from a ship) this should be fairly obvious. What this is supposed to prove regaridng the DS shields, I have no idea.
This leaves us with the option stated earlier, that the DS has acquired its own Van Allen belt, and other such fields associated with large planetoids, especially since the DS is mostly metallic in composition. This explains how Luke's strafing run caused some damage. The thermal exhaust port had its own independant ray shield generator, but no particle shielding, would this be to allow the reactor waste out perhaps?
No, it leaves us with the conclusion you can't read your own evidence properly and evidently don't know what you're talking about. None of this is the least bit contradictory with anything I have cited or posted in th eleast.
Wyrm's hugely thick shield theory was based on the idea that the 'magnetic field' was a shield of some sort. The description of shields above suggests otherwise, coupled with the fact that the turbulence begins a short while before any reference is made to the field, and the order given to switch deflectors on. I say again, the fighters did NOT have their shields up as they went into the field. If it was a particle shield, this would obviously have been suicidal.
Even assuming the "magnetic field" is separate and distinct from the particle shielding (which we needn't doo - EM fields would work quite well at blockign physical impactors, and the the Executor shields that stopped the ISDs were described as EM shields IIRC.) that does NOT mean they did not also have to pass through the deflector shields as well.

Again, unless you can actually provide direct evidence to contradict the novelization, it stands and your speculation falls flat on its ass.
Connor, I have only heard a few episodes of the radio drama, so I apologise if I seemed to be ignoring it as evidence, I assure you this was not my intention. Please post the relevant quote if possible.
ANH radio drama wrote: RED LEADER: All right, we're passing through their magnetic field. Hang on tight; we'll be doing a little rattling.

DODONNA: Their countermeasures equipment should get them through.

CONTROLLER: They've made it through the magnetic field!

RED LEADER: All ships, switch on your deflector shields, double forward.
Thanks to Wayne Poe for providing me with the reference a few weeks back. Of course, I'm certain it won't make any difference and you'll justt nitpick and/or ignore the interpretation of this like all the rest of the evidence. :roll:
User avatar
Wyrm
Jedi Council Member
Posts: 2206
Joined: 2005-09-02 01:10pm
Location: In the sand, pooping hallucinogenic goodness.

Post by Wyrm »

Lazarus wrote:I was under the impression that SW technology has plateaud, with new developments being new applications of already established technology, or scaling up of technology?
Size matters. In the Death Star, the Empire was trying a lot things on a scale that had never been successfully implemented before. The thickness of the shield is really enormous, even by planetary shield standards. Since technology is rarely precisely scalable, misbehavior in the techonology is sure to crop up on groundbreaking projects like the DS I, as well as overlooked details (like that dang thermal vent!).
Regardless, I fail to see how these shields could be impervious to capital ships, but not to fighters?
Again, size matters. Stress induced by a particular shield may be fatal on the size scale of capital ships, but survivable (if not gentle) on the scale of small, one-man fighters.
Taking your measurements to be reasonably accurate, I fail to see how this thickness changes the situation?
The thickness is important because of the greatly increased scale of what they were doing. Remember, technology is rarely precisely scalable. It may be that when the Empire scaled up a planetary defense system to the thickness of the DS's shields, they discovered that the technology started to misbehave, but the engineers did not consider the misbehavior serious in the face of the DS's mission, so they didn't spend the time or green on correcting it. (Or maybe the misbehavior was predicted well in advance, but considered not worth the effort to correct. Either way, it didn't get done.)
I agree that your theory about there being gaps due to such a great thickness is not illogical, but where is the flaw in the idea that the shield had been left up at navigational strength since reversion from hyperspace? This would easily explain the buffeting the fighters experienced, as they slipped through the shield due to their shields being stronger than the particular point where they were passing through the shield.
I'm not claiming that the DS's shields were or were not at navigational levels. I simply stated that the shields were at a sufficiently low level that a starfighter could punch through it with its systems and pilot reasonably intact if its shields were powered double-front.

As to why I introduced shield thicknesses in the first place, it was to show that the average speed of the starfighters at the time were on the same order as the "effective sublight speed" as incoming interstellar gas and dust when the DS is traveling at hyperspeed, and therefore the kinetic energies of the starfighter particles are on the same order as the gas in dust. Without knowing how shields work, we cannot know if shields interact with matter because they are traveling at some relative velocity (which may be superluminous), or they interact because the matter has some characteristic ratio of kinetic energy/rest energy associated with its motion (which is a monotonic function of relative velocity). Real world physics says that energy is a stronger determiner of whether things happen than speed.
Why do we have to revert to the holes theory?
I don't think there are holes left in the DS I's shields on purpose, not with that overpowered reactor of theirs. If there are holes at all, the abovestated misbehavior in the DS's shield is the most likely culprit.
Wyrm wrote:
I think "hole in the shield" neatly encapsulates the meaning of "places in the shield that are substantially weaker than other parts."
No, it doesn't. For example, a given wall is a foot thick. At one point there is a hole through it, such that you can reach through to the other side. At another point the wall is only half a foot thick, but despite this, you still cannot pass objects through the wall at this point. Are these two points the same? Nope. The interference zones are referred to as being 20% reductions in power, not holes. There is a distinct difference. I fail to see how you could become confused between these two situations, as they are quite clearly different.
Bad analogy. You're describing a shield that is thin in some places, instead of an interference zone. Remember, we are considering that the DS's shields are made out of plates that are full thickness, but (in your description) because they overlap, there is a volume extending all the way through the shield that is weak compared to the rest of the shield. If it's 20% weaker, it's because the shielding effects are uniformly 20% weaker over this entire volume, not because it is zero until you penetrate 20% of it, and then suddenly it's up to full strength. A better one would be a wall that's oak in some places and cork in others.

This interference zone thing was introduced by Spartan. However, I don't know where you're getting this 20% reduction in power figure. If the mismatch between two sections of a shield is particularly bad, there can be total destructive interference, which would result in 0% power. That's certainly a 'hole' in the shield in anyone's book.

Finally, consider that fields rarely have sharply defined boundaries. This means that, even though the volumes where the shield is considered to be "full strength" don't overlap, edge effects might cause the field of the shields to bleed over into the supposed 'gap'. We'd still call the gap a 'hole', even though it's filled somewhat with shielding effects.

Now, the above problems with shield-on-shield interference and shielding gaps are mere speculation, but if true, I imagine them to be well-known and have ready solutions for the shield configurations used in planetary defense. This is why such shields are able to trap starfighters. Four years later, the DS II had either solved the problems of the DS I, or the Death Star Project Shield Development Team had fallen back to shield configurations they could readily solve all of the development problems in the alloted time and budget. In the DS I, they were apparently trying something that they hadn't quite worked the bugs out yet, but the bugs where not thought to be serious. (They were.)
Wyrm, I agree with your analysis of possible one way shields, if I understand it correctly!
If you understand what a "perfect engine" is, why they're not allowed, and why the apparatus I described is a perfect engine, then you understand the thermodynamic argument. :wink:
An example of this could be from HttE, where hangar bay shields are dropped to allow the TIE fighters through, because if they were left up, then some considerable harm would befall the ships pilots.
That would fall under "meat safety", I think.
However, throughout the series the Chimaera fires its weapons whilst its shields are up, and this state of affairs is continued through every instance of space combat I can think of. Random example-the attack on the Lusankya in The Bacta War: the Lusankya's shields are up, however it is described as firing waves of turbolaser and iron cannon blasts towards the attacking craft.
As opposed to bronze cannons? 8)
If there were independant shields for each weapon, which would be dropped as the weapon fired, then there would be some sort of patchwork of shields in operation. This is clearly not the case, as the Lusankya's shields are said to consist of 6 individual shields: Forward, Aft, Port, Starboard, Dorsal, Ventral.
I'll buy that argument.
The book also describes ray shields:
'Ray shields will absorb blasts from laser cannons, turbolasers and other energy weapons. Since these shields consume a tremendous amount of energy, they are raised only when battle is imminent. Shield energy permeates the ship's hull and wraps the vessel in layers of energy that may extend anywhere from a few millimetres to several centimetres away from the hull.
Well, it's wrong. The Gungan shields in TPM were ray shields (that's why the TF droid army had to resort to stepping through it to attack the Gungans, remember?), yet the large amazilla-mounted generated shields had a bubble structure. Movie trumps everything.
Wyrm's hugely thick shield theory was based on the idea that the 'magnetic field' was a shield of some sort. The description of shields above suggests otherwise, coupled with the fact that the turbulence begins a short while before any reference is made to the field, and the order given to switch deflectors on. I say again, the fighters did NOT have their shields up as they went into the field. If it was a particle shield, this would obviously have been suicidal.
You do know I was coordinating the events as described in Connor's reference (ANH novel, Page 189) with the events on the screen, do you not? Also, you do know that most fields are continuous over space, so the shield wouldn't reach its full strenth and ship-frying effectiveness immediately? The shield starts buffeting starfighters at around 2200 km (the outer echelons), but would not be at the level where it would cause serious damage quite yet. This is part of the "edge effects" I described earlier.
NRS Guardian wrote:The way I see particle shields is they're rather like a protective atmosphere where it's thickest at the surface and grows more difuse as distance from the surface increases, however the greater the depth the stronger it is at the surface and the more volume there is to stop stuff. Also the more power is put into the shield the thicker the field is, so by decreasing power the field can be made thinner and more easily penetrated. Thus by lowering the energy the field is thinned allowing stuff to more easily approach and enter. In additon while it's thickest at the surface the closer you are to the hull the less shield you have to go through to get at the hull. Also, like an atmosphere if you hit it at a great enough speed or steep enough angle you're going to be stopped by it, however the thinner it is the faster and steeper you can go through it. Thus probably what people in-universe mean when they talk about holes is that at a reasonable speed you can penetrate the shield while not having to worry about missiles or fighters coming at your "unprotected hull" at fractions of c. Especially considering you "lower" your shields to allow fighters and missiles to launch and fighters to come aboard, all relatively low speed events.
Remember the afforementioned Wedge's Gamble? That had shield layers. So, how does this mechanism give shield configurations with this kind of internal structure?

EDIT: Clarified which of the honorable Sen. MacLeod's references I was refering to.
Last edited by Wyrm on 2006-04-14 12:36am, edited 1 time in total.
Darth Wong on Strollers vs. Assholes: "There were days when I wished that my stroller had weapons on it."
wilfulton on Bible genetics: "If two screaming lunatics copulate in front of another screaming lunatic, the result will be yet another screaming lunatic. 8)"
SirNitram: "The nation of France is a theory, not a fact. It should therefore be approached with an open mind, and critically debated and considered."

Cornivore! | BAN-WATCH CANE: XVII | WWJDFAKB? - What Would Jesus Do... For a Klondike Bar? | Evil Bayesian Conspiracy
User avatar
Connor MacLeod
Sith Apprentice
Posts: 14065
Joined: 2002-08-01 05:03pm
Contact:

Post by Connor MacLeod »

Oh yes, my original post on page 3:

Myself wrote: Considering the ability to readjust and angle deflectors (as well as numerous canon and official references to "overlapping" deflector shields, reinforcing shields, etc.) we know that shields consist of individual arcs (like most technologies, such as the superlaser, scaling up the technology involves the combination of multiple smaller segments to create the larger effect.)

From the novel "Tyrant's Test", we know that overlapping shield sections can creat (intermittent?) weak points or gaps that, if known about, can be exploited.

Also, we know from the ANH Radio Drama that the fighters employed countermeasures specifically designed for assisting in penetrating the DS's defenses. (shield penetration techology is a well established fact as well, such as the remote Zam Wessell used in AOTC.)

As for why such "gaps" might exist, a very simple reason: Navigation. Most if not all sensors (passive or active) do not work very well through shields (or if they do, their ranges are cut down drastically with shields active.) It would therefore make sense to leave gaps through which signals could pass out (active sensors) or emissions to get in (passive sensors.)
Can we stop strawmanning me now? :roll:
User avatar
Wyrm
Jedi Council Member
Posts: 2206
Joined: 2005-09-02 01:10pm
Location: In the sand, pooping hallucinogenic goodness.

Post by Wyrm »

Connor MacLeod, much earlier, wrote:Considering the ability to readjust and angle deflectors (as well as numerous canon and official references to "overlapping" deflector shields, reinforcing shields, etc.) we know that shields consist of individual arcs (like most technologies, such as the superlaser, scaling up the technology involves the combination of multiple smaller segments to create the larger effect.)

From the novel "Tyrant's Test", we know that overlapping shield sections can creat (intermittent?) weak points or gaps that, if known about, can be exploited.
Whoops, you're the one who introduced the interface problem. :oops: My bad for misassigning credit to Spartan.

The bolded section sounds like a particularly bad matching in the overlap of two shielding elements can open bona fide gaps, or at least extremely weak points in the shield, like I said in my previous post. Replicate this engineering challenge a fucktillion times over the whole of the Death Star, and you have quite the potential for a shitload of bugs to crop up during development. 8)
Darth Wong on Strollers vs. Assholes: "There were days when I wished that my stroller had weapons on it."
wilfulton on Bible genetics: "If two screaming lunatics copulate in front of another screaming lunatic, the result will be yet another screaming lunatic. 8)"
SirNitram: "The nation of France is a theory, not a fact. It should therefore be approached with an open mind, and critically debated and considered."

Cornivore! | BAN-WATCH CANE: XVII | WWJDFAKB? - What Would Jesus Do... For a Klondike Bar? | Evil Bayesian Conspiracy
User avatar
Connor MacLeod
Sith Apprentice
Posts: 14065
Joined: 2002-08-01 05:03pm
Contact:

Post by Connor MacLeod »

Wyrm wrote:
Connor MacLeod, much earlier, wrote:Considering the ability to readjust and angle deflectors (as well as numerous canon and official references to "overlapping" deflector shields, reinforcing shields, etc.) we know that shields consist of individual arcs (like most technologies, such as the superlaser, scaling up the technology involves the combination of multiple smaller segments to create the larger effect.)

From the novel "Tyrant's Test", we know that overlapping shield sections can creat (intermittent?) weak points or gaps that, if known about, can be exploited.
Whoops, you're the one who introduced the interface problem. :oops: My bad for misassigning credit to Spartan.

The bolded section sounds like a particularly bad matching in the overlap of two shielding elements can open bona fide gaps, or at least extremely weak points in the shield, like I said in my previous post. Replicate this engineering challenge a fucktillion times over the whole of the Death Star, and you have quite the potential for a shitload of bugs to crop up during development. 8)
That's pretty much what Dodonna says in the ANH novelization. The "gaps" (holes or weak points, take oyur pick) which allowed the fighters to slip through were deliberate on the part of the designers. He even suggsts that they were aware of it but unconcerned - they believed their defenses couild deal with small fighter threats. If they'd been worried, they'd have provided "tighter screens.")

Of course, tehre's lots of legitimate reasons for gaps (ion engine exhaust for one. There's also the thermal ports for the superlaser - they evidently rely on the ejecting of large amounts of supercooled gasses. They might also use such ejection as a recoil-countering mechanism for the superlaser, which means leaving holes open for matter to pass through.)

And again, given the dynamic nature of shields, its not all THAT major a threat, since you can "angle" shields to eliminate or minimize such interfernece if neccessary.
User avatar
Lazarus
Jedi Master
Posts: 1082
Joined: 2006-01-12 02:05pm
Location: Southport, UK
Contact:

Post by Lazarus »

Connor wrote:
Except that we have the novelization (something which you appare to be ignoring in this instance.) to tell us what he is referring to. I've got hte novel, you have nothing to back up your interpretation. Thus you lose. Don't you know how evidence works?
Clearly not as well as I should do, I thought movies beat everything, including novelisations. Ah well, sorry. :oops:
As you said, this kinda ruins my argument, so I'm gonna wave the white flag about now...

Despite all the to-ing and fro-ing, I think Wyrm's come up with a pretty solid theory to explain all of this, namely that shield interference zones are not a universal problem, but only became evident on the DS due to the scale of its shielding systems. I was objecting to the holes idea on the basis that it would apply to all shields, everywhere, which is contradicted in a variety of places, however this theory means this doesn't have to be the case.

Just one little nit pick left...
Wyrm wrote:
Well, it's wrong. The Gungan shields in TPM were ray shields (that's why the TF droid army had to resort to stepping through it to attack the Gungans, remember?), yet the large amazilla-mounted generated shields had a bubble structure. Movie trumps everything.
If the Gungan shields were ray shields, which do not stop physical objects, then why were the AAT's tank shells and missiles stopped?
Image
Image
User avatar
Wyrm
Jedi Council Member
Posts: 2206
Joined: 2005-09-02 01:10pm
Location: In the sand, pooping hallucinogenic goodness.

Post by Wyrm »

Lazarus wrote:Just one little nit pick left...
Wyrm wrote:
Well, it's wrong. The Gungan shields in TPM were ray shields (that's why the TF droid army had to resort to stepping through it to attack the Gungans, remember?), yet the large amazilla-mounted generated shields had a bubble structure. Movie trumps everything.
If the Gungan shields were ray shields, which do not stop physical objects, then why were the AAT's tank shells and missiles stopped?
The two kinds of shielding can be laid on top of each other, right? That the shield blocked a physical object only means that there's a particle shield present. It doesn't mean that there isn't a ray shield present with it. Since the droid army is equipped with blasters, the next thing to try would obviously be the blasters, to see if they could get through. I don't specifically remember if there was any of that, though, and without it, there's no strong evidence that the ray shields were there. (My recording of TPM off the cable was crap, so it was trashed. I guess I'll just have to bite the bullet and get it on DVD. :x)

Well, even if I misremember what the Gungan theatre shield blocked, you're still wrong about ray shields. In the opening sequence of ANH (just after the familiar crawl), when the DVD counter reaches 0:02:28 (two minutes and 28 seconds into the film) we see a turbolaser bolt burst into flack just above the Tantive IV. The frame just before has the turbolaser bolt zipping 0.35±0.05 cm above the Tantive, and almost parallel to its direction of flight, and the bow of the Tantive itself is 1.5±0.1 cm in the same shot. I don't know the dimensions of the Tantive, but I do know it isn't of the order of 42 cm.

Going to Jeff Russel's Starship Dimensions page, the height of the structure I measured from the film (a vertical cylindrical structure) is 13px high on a scale of 2 m/px, so ballpark of 26 m high. Therefore, the flack burst flared on the order of 6 m above the Tantive. Since this is a turbolaser bolt, it was disipated by a ray shield. This defeats the assertion that the ray shields only extend a few centimeters from the ship's hull; movie trumps EGtW&T.
Darth Wong on Strollers vs. Assholes: "There were days when I wished that my stroller had weapons on it."
wilfulton on Bible genetics: "If two screaming lunatics copulate in front of another screaming lunatic, the result will be yet another screaming lunatic. 8)"
SirNitram: "The nation of France is a theory, not a fact. It should therefore be approached with an open mind, and critically debated and considered."

Cornivore! | BAN-WATCH CANE: XVII | WWJDFAKB? - What Would Jesus Do... For a Klondike Bar? | Evil Bayesian Conspiracy
Post Reply