While this seems reasonable, it possibly contrasts with the depiction of the prototype Death Star shown in the Jedi Academy Trilogy, which could recharge its capacitors from a moon-shattering blast in at most a few hours (Champions of the Force) and recharge half power in fiften minutes. This station lacked all shielding etc, so those may take up a greater continuous energy than it seems.Illuminatus Primus wrote:To the last query: yes. According to the ROTS ICS, true warships can focus 100% of their reactor output through their weapons systems; furthermore, the EGtV&S informs us that the Death Star I took a day's worth of capacitor charging to fire the prime weapon; this probably means the reactor had to run at near 100% for that long to build a planet-obliterating blast. If it was only a small fraction, why not just dedicate the reactor directly and have it only take a minute or less? Furthermore, the laws of thermodynamics dictate that heat must be radiated; when a starship is moving most of its heat is being carried away by exhaust - when it is firing, its being carried away by weapons' fire. The Death Star cannot be running at full-intensity all the time, and there's nothing to suggest the myriad shielding and drives and small weapons require constant power output, otherwise we'd be able to see many times the energy content of the Alderaan blast being emitted from the Death Star: it should glow white.
(OTOH, I seem to recall that beam being distinctly weaker than that of the original DS, but it could still cause fragments of the moon to disperse at Alderaan-like speeds.)
How do we then explain the Eclipse's shield-breaking capabilities?Yeah, and you don't think the quantity of energy matters? Have you taken physics? The Alderaani shield safely absorbed a 1e22 megaton beam for a few fractions of a second before failing and the planet being destroyed. A SSD cannot hope to generate anything close to that wattage; so it should be easily dissipated.
Yes, but would Durga agree? That single instance was the moment his plan came the closest to unravelling; had the NR suspected anything (which any reasonable estimate would say they should), his plans to build the weapon in secret would be irreparably shattered. That he was willing to take such a risk, even assuming he was aware of the KJA-freakishly incompetent security, seems to imply that there was some very real gain involved in obtaining the data; even if Lemelisk was able to recreate his research, it would perhaps have been ridiculously expensive or somesuch.Do you think aircraft carriers are radical, cutting-edge technological applications? Because the USN is the only naval force on the planet which has successfully consistently deployed CTOL nuclear-powered aircraft carriers. The French have modern warships, nuclear power, nuclear weapons, etc.; and their CVN is a big headache. Engineers are not magicians; they require technical data and so on and so forth. If New Republic data security is so porus and shitty that rat-like creatures can run through ducts to access it from diplomatic reception halls, if you were Bevel Lemilisk, would not you request such immensely useful data at such relatively ridiculously low cost?
That's also a possibility, but given the mindset and delusions of grandeur of the various warlords, wouldn't at least one of them at least attempt to build a superlaser weapon if he had the technology available? There's no evidence you need monstrous (by SW standards) resources to build one; the fact that the NR genuinely believed Admiral Krennel's small polity could build one shortly after the Thrawn campaign speaks against such ideas.Or you do not waste millions-of-ISDs worth of materials and construction infrastructure on single white elephant projects in the midst of civil war and disintegration of the state apparatus. That comes with a heavy opportunity cost. Its simply less useful and more risky to engage in than dedicating the same resources to conventional military build-up. That is assuming that building Death Star-capable superlasers was possible given the effect wholesale disintegration of the Empire would have on delicate economies of scale. The Tarkin was a superlaser test bed; there is no evidence that its firepower would be sufficient to overpower Alderaan-level shields, and therefore, it would fail to serve in the same role and effectiveness as a Death Star. Not to mention, the logistics sink and risky supply tail of such a vessel while you cannot even trust your fleet commanders to stay loyal argues against its deployment.
What is the evidence for calling SPHA-T beam weapons, etc, superlasers?Wrong. We see intermediates between "pulse" turbolasers and superlasers such as the SPHA-T, we see blaster-equivalents of the superlaser in the composite beam turrets, we see superlaser utilized for civilian purposes and called such. There is no evidence that they are purely unique aside from scale and firepower. There's plenty of evidence to suggest that the superlaser is just an unusually massive-scale application of given technology, and you need to disprove that. By relying on your interpretation under the cover of "no evidence either way" (which is untrue), is an argument of ignorance.
Not one hundred percent, but some percentage. As per the DS prototype.Why would these require 100% reactor output at all times? Why would shields, weapons, propulsion etc. require reactor output when idle? Why would life support require anything close to the power required to relativistically scatter a shielded planet? How come we do not see that constant reactor output emitted thermodynamically?
So is the ship and superlaser it has to support.The Eclipse's reactor is much smaller than the DS2's.
OK. In DE, the narration talks about "a new generation of AT-ATs equipped with the most advanced Imperial turbolasers". Han says, "Those things are employing the new X-80 power cells we heard about". So there appears to have been some improvement in power generation/storage since Hoth, although how applicable that would be on larger scales is anyone's guess. I just mentioned it since it's a possibility.Cite your sources clearly, please. And the rational conclusion from the evidence and political stasis of the GFFA is that there has been relatively static technological/scientific progress.
I somehow assumed the power output of the final composite beam would be as large as the sum total of the contributing ones; if anything, energy should be lost in the transfer, not gained. So that should be about 2/3rds of 1/8th of the final beam.Since we do not know the output of the technobabble beams, or the mechanism by which the final 1e22 beam is generated from them, this is a meaningless standard. Meanwhile, the physical damage description is much more subjective and suggests a hundred billionth output compared to the DS1.
Do we see very large weapons on the Eclipse (apart from the superlaser)?Firstly, the Eclipse is a gigantic glorified Imperial yacht. Secondly, you're relying on an assumption of individual parity in weapons, when we know the Executor visually does not boast many weapons larger than that of an ISD, yet much larger more powerful weapons are known to exist. Unwarranted assumption.
I was contemplating standing by a technobabble argument and explaining away the film with special effects problems or somesuch, but the ion cannon thing makes that difficult. OK, you're presenting a convincing problem here.This is unrealistic; overwhelming a shield is based on intensity of power-delivered, not the name of the weapon delivering it. Furthermore, it asserts an impossibly retarded wastefulness and incompetence on the part of the Empire, building a weapon as large as the Death Star to deliver 1e22 megaton firepower when the Alderaani shield, according to you, was not merely so strong it could dissipate the 1e22 megaton beam for a fraction of a second but not longer, but rather because it was called a superlaser and they have "roll d6 for shield penetration magic."
Remember, secondary sources also claimed that ion cannons could insta-penetrate any shield, and this is totally misinformed. The Death Star superlaser can be visually CONFIRMED to not magically penetrate the shield; rather it was held off for some time before being overwhelmed and failing.
That contradicts most of the data on blasters I'm familiar with.No, they are not. Most turbolaser/laser weapons are c-propogating beams with a visible "tracer" pulse. The Death Star superlaser is a c-propogating beam. "Plasma" mechanisms make no sense for any evidence presented in the films. The only apparent difference is composite-beam weapons' beams are visible along their entire length, rather than a particular isolated tracer component.
Hadn't the Coruscant shields been recently sabotaged, and might that not explain their poor performance?The shield heat sink capacity and heat dissipation ceilings are not attributed, so we have no way of comparing results. Not all deflector shields are created equally. You're relying on name-game argument again. Alderaan had a high-performance shield that could safely absorb/dissipate a 1e22 megaton Death Star beam for a fraction of a second. The (apparently low-performance) Coruscanti shield in The Krytos Trap could be defeated from underneath by salvos from HIMS Lusankya. We should assume defeating shields is a matter of conventional overwhelming of capacity unless proved otherwise. We should not arbitrarily invent magic technobabble, and certainly not on the basis of name games.
SW technology is remarkably inconsistent; in the Great Hyperspace War, ground combat was fought with spears, but FTL space travel had been around for millennia already. Sometimes it feels like it isn't supposed to make senseFurthermore, the idea the Eclipse could punch out shields is retarded in of itself, because it renders the Death Star obsolescent after only a decade of progress in a technologically static galaxy.
I'll concede I'm no physicist, but as I mentioned, SW isn't always that commonsensical, and since there doesn't appear to be conclusive evidence against the Eclipse's capabilities, aren't we somehow forced to accept them as canon?I think you're a tad bit undereducated in physics (particularly thermodynamics), and a bit rusty on the scientific method. We do not ignorantly accept secondary sources technological/physical claims if they are not reasonably consistent scientifically and observably with the filmic canon or in outright defiance of common sense.
Still, I see where you're coming from.