CrossoverManiac's little calculation...
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IIRC ISD's do, since they were employed in Dark Empire to help the ISD survive crashing into Coruscant. Likewise, they're neccesary close to planets (unless you think large streams of near-c ionized particles are healthy near a planet)SPOOFE wrote:ISD's and up still utilized repulsorlifts... they just weren't designed to go into a planet's atmosphere, is all.IIRC, no ship larger than a VicStarII has a repulsorlift. And I doubt it would work from that far out.
Hell, the Death Star had Repulsorlift tech (canon ANH novelization.) I doubt Star Destroyers wo uld not have it also.
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Who said it's at rest? It could be circulating about the ship at >c speeds, creating a halo of tachyonic matter.ClaysGhost wrote:Yes, it's technobabble.
Build something out of tachyons, build something that cannot survive at rest without laughing in the face of physics.
Of course, it isn't feasible. It is only mathematically possible. However, that puts it in the same league as wormholes, and I don't recall people objecting in the same strenuous terms whenever wormholes are mentioned.Build something partly out of tachyons, watch in delight as the tachyon part of the something demonstrates zero connection with the rest of the structure (or more precisely, watch as the real matter stays where it is and the tachyons zip off into la-la land and carry on with violating causality, being sold into slavery in New Age healing products and all manner of other delightful things).
"It's not evil for God to do it. Or for someone to do it at God's command."- Jonathan Boyd on baby-killing
"you guys are fascinated with the use of those "rules of logic" to the extent that you don't really want to discussus anything."- GC
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http://www.stardestroyer.net/Mike/RantMode/Blurbs.html
"you guys are fascinated with the use of those "rules of logic" to the extent that you don't really want to discussus anything."- GC
"I do not believe Russian Roulette is a stupid act" - Embracer of Darkness
"Viagra commercials appear to save lives" - tharkûn on US health care.
http://www.stardestroyer.net/Mike/RantMode/Blurbs.html
Mr Wong, could you please explain what you mean whenever you mentionb hypermatter? You are talking about tachyonic halos, have mentioned matter being 90 degrees to reality, and imaginary numbers in describing hypermatter. So could you please put it in laymen's terms?
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OK, what is the square root of 4? 2. And what is the square root of -4? Hmmmm ....Ender wrote:Mr Wong, could you please explain what you mean whenever you mentionb hypermatter? You are talking about tachyonic halos, have mentioned matter being 90 degrees to reality, and imaginary numbers in describing hypermatter. So could you please put it in laymen's terms?
There is no real number which is the square root of -4. However, there are so-called "imaginary numbers" which do work for that purpose, and the square root of -4 is 2i, where i is defined as the square root of -1.
Now, let's say you have a number 2+2i. This has a real component (2) and an imaginary component (2i). On a chart where the Y-axis is imaginary numbers and the X-axis is real numbers, its phase angle would be 45 degrees. Its magnitude would be roughly 2.8.
Imaginary numbers are often thought of as an abstraction, but there are aplications for them (read Hawking's second book, "Black Holes and Baby Universes", in which he discusses imaginary time). In Einsteinian relativity, superluminal velocities generate imaginary numbers as solutions, and that's where this comes from.
The ICS specifically describes manipulation of the complex mass/energy of the ship in order to achieve hyperspace. In other words, a SW ship's mass is not described with a real number X. Instead, it is described with a number X+Yi.
In theory, let's suppose a SW ship has a mass in tons of 5E7+(1E9)(i). Its "real" mass would be 50 million tons. The magnitude of its complex mass would be 1 billion tons. The phase angle would be roughly 87.1 degrees. Now, let's say it can manipulate its complex mass to a phase angle of 90 degrees; the magnitude of its complex mass would be unchanged, but its real mass would become zero. Conversely, let's say it can manipulate its complex mass to a phase angle of 0 degrees: its real mass suddenly skyrockets to roughly 1.001 billion tons.
Now, you're thinking that this is all just a shitload of meaningless mathematical mumbo-jumbo, right? Well, you'd have a point. But it's exactly the same kind of meaningless mumbo-jumbo that's used to justify wormhole theory. Imaginary mass is bizarre, but certainly no less than negative mass. What does -5 kg look like? Any sci-fi fan who scoffs at the ICS description of complex mass manipulation but wholeheartedly accepts wormholes is not being fair.
"It's not evil for God to do it. Or for someone to do it at God's command."- Jonathan Boyd on baby-killing
"you guys are fascinated with the use of those "rules of logic" to the extent that you don't really want to discussus anything."- GC
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http://www.stardestroyer.net/Mike/RantMode/Blurbs.html
"you guys are fascinated with the use of those "rules of logic" to the extent that you don't really want to discussus anything."- GC
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"Viagra commercials appear to save lives" - tharkûn on US health care.
http://www.stardestroyer.net/Mike/RantMode/Blurbs.html
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I will attempt to break down Mike's explanation into simpler terms, since I'm sure a few people didn't get it. Keep in mind, everything here is a Lie To Laymen.. It's not true, but it's close enough that you can conceptualize the ideas.
The easiest parallel is simply to walk over to Trek and use their technobabble 'Mass Lightening'. They can raise and lower the real mass of a ship by shoving the rest elsewhere, manipulating the Complex Mass is pretty much the same thing. Lower the mass, higher the speed, until your mass is 0 and you hit lightspeed. Theoretically, they can increase the phase angle to, say, 100, where they now have negative mass(And, theoretically, they will now be moving faster than light). This is very consistant with Mr. Saxton's thoughts on Hyperspace.
I hope that made sense. Again, it's not completely right, but it's close enough for you to conceptualize the idea.
The easiest parallel is simply to walk over to Trek and use their technobabble 'Mass Lightening'. They can raise and lower the real mass of a ship by shoving the rest elsewhere, manipulating the Complex Mass is pretty much the same thing. Lower the mass, higher the speed, until your mass is 0 and you hit lightspeed. Theoretically, they can increase the phase angle to, say, 100, where they now have negative mass(And, theoretically, they will now be moving faster than light). This is very consistant with Mr. Saxton's thoughts on Hyperspace.
I hope that made sense. Again, it's not completely right, but it's close enough for you to conceptualize the idea.
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When did I say anything about iron being volatile?Darth Wong wrote:Iron is a volatile substance [/list]
If I made any math errors, just say so and I'll make the necessary changes. As ClaysGhost pointed out, I know I didn't take into account the changing mass of the superlaser as converts hypermatter into the energy for the superlaser.(and let's not even discuss his idiotic math).
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???? All it needs is a really large hyperdrive.Ender wrote:Lets face it, the DS is all kinds of screwy. It goes to hyperspace when it's own mass should generate enough of a grav well for it not to.
All we know is that the Emperor's throne room has a long tunnel in it. Who says it leads to the reactor? (Even if it did, SW has forcefields)Ender wrote:despite having a direct opening to space through the reactor, the Emperor's throne room did not depressurize.
It's been speculated that the Alderaan rings were Hypermatter reactors going up. The Mon Cal cruisers were probably too small to make visible rings from their (relatively) puny hypermatter reactors.Ender wrote:It causes ring explosions in some things, and doesn't cause them in others.
The Death Star Superlaser acts nothing like a blaster bolt. Why should they have similar systems?Ender wrote:It can hold enough tibanna gas to fire alot of DS shots even though there is nowwhere on the ship shown to hold that stuff.
I thought that corridor was just below an exploding gun emplacement.Ender wrote:The thing gets shaken by TLshots. Not alot makes sense.
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So when the DS babbles its phase angle around from mostly-tachyonic to slightly-tachyonic, in preparation for firing, what happens? Some guy's briefcase decelerates from its orbit around the station and reappears to make up the missing mass? Must everyone on the DS look forward to periods during which some of their mass decides to wend its merry way around the station faster than the speed of light? And if the power fails whilst some of the mass is tachyonic, look out; it'll make the Enterprise towing around antimatter look sensible as regards safety.Darth Wong wrote: Who said it's at rest? It could be circulating about the ship at >c speeds, creating a halo of tachyonic matter.
Nobody suggested building a battle-station out of wormholes before. Further, wormholes are valid solutions to the GR field equations. Tachyons are one of several possible interpretations of spacelike momentum vectors. Whilst both are mathematical curiosities, they are certainly not of the same order of sanity.Of course, it isn't feasible. It is only mathematically possible. However, that puts it in the same league as wormholes, and I don't recall people objecting in the same strenuous terms whenever wormholes are mentioned.
(3.13, 1.49, -1.01)
So despite the fact that hyperdrives don't work in a grav well and something the size of a small moon would generate it's own grav well, you say a large enough hyperdrive would let it go to lightspeed. What proof do you have that hyperdrive size affects gravity interaction? Now what Wong posted earlier would explain it, as it would just have to lower it's own mass, but what you put down does not compute.Pcm979 wrote:???? All it needs is a really large hyperdrive.
The fact that it went to the reactor is well extablished. And Yes, I believe ther must be forcefields there. But it is still stupid.All we know is that the Emperor's throne room has a long tunnel in it. Who says it leads to the reactor? (Even if it did, SW has forcefields)
That was my attempt to take a potshot at the chain reaction theory.It's been speculated that the Alderaan rings were Hypermatter reactors going up. The Mon Cal cruisers were probably too small to make visible rings from their (relatively) puny hypermatter reactors.
You mean aside from the fact that it is the same technology, just scaled way the fuck up?The Death Star Superlaser acts nothing like a blaster bolt. Why should they have similar systems?
ROTJ novel says the station was rocking from TL blasts.I thought that corridor was just below an exploding gun emplacement.
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Iron makes up a large part of the planet. If this chain reaction uses the matter of the planet for fuel, that means it consumes iron. Meaning you and Darkstar and all other chain reactionists believe that iron is volatile.[/quote]Crossover_Maniac wrote: When did I say anything about iron being volatile?
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DipshitGhost, no one said complex mass is tachyonic.ClaysGhost wrote:So when the DS babbles its phase angle around from mostly-tachyonic to slightly-tachyonic, in preparation for firing, what happens? Some guy's briefcase decelerates from its orbit around the station and reappears to make up the missing mass? Must everyone on the DS look forward to periods during which some of their mass decides to wend its merry way around the station faster than the speed of light? And if the power fails whilst some of the mass is tachyonic, look out; it'll make the Enterprise towing around antimatter look sensible as regards safety.Darth Wong wrote: Who said it's at rest? It could be circulating about the ship at >c speeds, creating a halo of tachyonic matter.
Nobody suggested building a battle-station out of wormholes before. Further, wormholes are valid solutions to the GR field equations. Tachyons are one of several possible interpretations of spacelike momentum vectors. Whilst both are mathematical curiosities, they are certainly not of the same order of sanity.Of course, it isn't feasible. It is only mathematically possible. However, that puts it in the same league as wormholes, and I don't recall people objecting in the same strenuous terms whenever wormholes are mentioned.
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It generates the 1E38 J of energy that is otherwise seemingly impossible. But if you have a better explanation, please let me know.ClaysGhost wrote:So when the DS babbles its phase angle around from mostly-tachyonic to slightly-tachyonic, in preparation for firing, what happens?Darth Wong wrote:Who said it's at rest? It could be circulating about the ship at >c speeds, creating a halo of tachyonic matter.
If you've got a better explanation for hyperdrive, then by all means, provide it. And by the way, everyone DOES, in fact, have to look forward to becoming tachyonic during hyperspace travel. It IS a superluminal drive system, in case you haven't been paying attention.Some guy's briefcase decelerates from its orbit around the station and reappears to make up the missing mass? Must everyone on the DS look forward to periods during which some of their mass decides to wend its merry way around the station faster than the speed of light?
You are raising issues of practical application, not mathematics. I could just as easily raise similarly horrendous issues with wormholes, yet I don't.And if the power fails whilst some of the mass is tachyonic, look out; it'll make the Enterprise towing around antimatter look sensible as regards safety.
Bullshit. Wormholes require huge amounts of negative mass, and would induce monstrous tidal forces that annihilate anything trying to move through them. I don't see how they are any less ridiculous than imaginary mass manipulation.Nobody suggested building a battle-station out of wormholes before. Further, wormholes are valid solutions to the GR field equations. Tachyons are one of several possible interpretations of spacelike momentum vectors. Whilst both are mathematical curiosities, they are certainly not of the same order of sanity.Of course, it isn't feasible. It is only mathematically possible. However, that puts it in the same league as wormholes, and I don't recall people objecting in the same strenuous terms whenever wormholes are mentioned.
"It's not evil for God to do it. Or for someone to do it at God's command."- Jonathan Boyd on baby-killing
"you guys are fascinated with the use of those "rules of logic" to the extent that you don't really want to discussus anything."- GC
"I do not believe Russian Roulette is a stupid act" - Embracer of Darkness
"Viagra commercials appear to save lives" - tharkûn on US health care.
http://www.stardestroyer.net/Mike/RantMode/Blurbs.html
"you guys are fascinated with the use of those "rules of logic" to the extent that you don't really want to discussus anything."- GC
"I do not believe Russian Roulette is a stupid act" - Embracer of Darkness
"Viagra commercials appear to save lives" - tharkûn on US health care.
http://www.stardestroyer.net/Mike/RantMode/Blurbs.html
- Crossover_Maniac
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I said it was one of the explanations. I also said the Death Star's superlaser could be composed of a mix of particles with possitive mass and negative mass allowing for a net momentum of zero, the superlaser particles are not only massless but doesn't have any momentum or the structural integrity field is strong enough on the Death Star to counter the stress caused by the superlaser (I'd explained this in my thread) although I have some doubts about the last one. The 'volatile iron' theory is just one possiblity. But I did manage to find at least one instance where iron is volatile.Ender wrote:Iron makes up a large part of the planet. If this chain reaction uses the matter of the planet for fuel, that means it consumes iron. Meaning you and Darkstar and all other chain reactionists believe that iron is volatile.Crossover_Maniac wrote: When did I say anything about iron being volatile?
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Alright thenCrossover_Maniac wrote:I said it was one of the explanations. I also said the Death Star's superlaser could be composed of a mix of particles with possitive mass and negative mass allowing for a net momentum of zero, the superlaser particles are not only massless but doesn't have any momentum or the structural integrity field is strong enough on the Death Star to counter the stress caused by the superlaser (I'd explained this in my thread) although I have some doubts about the last one.Ender wrote:Iron makes up a large part of the planet. If this chain reaction uses the matter of the planet for fuel, that means it consumes iron. Meaning you and Darkstar and all other chain reactionists believe that iron is volatile.Crossover_Maniac wrote: When did I say anything about iron being volatile?
Are your trying to claim that the DS could use the same technology as the Galaxy Gun, but in beam form?The 'volatile iron' theory is just one possiblity. But I did manage to find at least one instance where iron is volatile.
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Actually, "explanations" have to make sense. Small detail you apparently left out, as usual.Crossover_Maniac wrote:I said it was one of the explanations.Ender wrote:Iron makes up a large part of the planet. If this chain reaction uses the matter of the planet for fuel, that means it consumes iron. Meaning you and Darkstar and all other chain reactionists believe that iron is volatile.Crossover_Maniac wrote: When did I say anything about iron being volatile?
You're an idiot. Such a beam would have zero energy, since the positive and negative masses would cancel out.I also said the Death Star's superlaser could be composed of a mix of particles with possitive mass and negative mass allowing for a net momentum of zero, the superlaser particles are not only massless but doesn't have any momentum or the structural integrity field is strong enough on the Death Star to counter the stress caused by the superlaser (I'd explained this in my thread) although I have some doubts about the last one.
This actually disproves your point (not that I've ever been a big fan of the Galaxy Gun; such Trek-like chain reactions are a brain-bug IMHO and it's g good thing we don't see them in the canon films), since a miniscule Galaxy Gun missile can do this. If an insignificant Galaxy Gun missile can do this, why would the Death Star need a gigantic moon-sized reactor and gun in order to do it?The 'volatile iron' theory is just one possiblity. But I did manage to find at least one instance where iron is volatile.
Small wonder you posted your bullshit on SB but not here. Always best to keep stupid ideas away from people who will actually call you on it, eh?
"It's not evil for God to do it. Or for someone to do it at God's command."- Jonathan Boyd on baby-killing
"you guys are fascinated with the use of those "rules of logic" to the extent that you don't really want to discussus anything."- GC
"I do not believe Russian Roulette is a stupid act" - Embracer of Darkness
"Viagra commercials appear to save lives" - tharkûn on US health care.
http://www.stardestroyer.net/Mike/RantMode/Blurbs.html
"you guys are fascinated with the use of those "rules of logic" to the extent that you don't really want to discussus anything."- GC
"I do not believe Russian Roulette is a stupid act" - Embracer of Darkness
"Viagra commercials appear to save lives" - tharkûn on US health care.
http://www.stardestroyer.net/Mike/RantMode/Blurbs.html
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Plus there is the simple fact it was specifically stated that the Galaxy Gun missile was a brand new weapons application, and nothing like it had been done before.Darth Wong wrote: This actually disproves your point (not that I've ever been a big fan of the Galaxy Gun; such Trek-like chain reactions are a brain-bug IMHO and it's g good thing we don't see them in the canon films), since a miniscule Galaxy Gun missile can do this. If an insignificant Galaxy Gun missile can do this, why would the Death Star need a gigantic moon-sized reactor and gun in order to do it?
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Bullshit, it waqs specifically stated that the Galaxy Gun was a new application of the technology.Crossover_Maniac wrote:It doesn't seem anymore outlandish than any of the other explanations.Ender wrote:Are your trying to claim that the DS could use the same technology as the Galaxy Gun, but in beam form?
"It's amazing we didn't think of it years ago" - Palpatine
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Exact Quote from HDS's thread on them in PSW
========================
At that very moment, young Emperor Palpatine is making an inspection tour of his new Galaxy Gun.
UMAK LETH: "We're relieved you chose to return to us, Emperor."
EMPEROR: "I could not have done otherwise, Leth. Now explain the operation of this new weapon to me."
LETH: "Of course, Your Majesty! As you already know, its purpose is to launch intelligent projectiles into hyperspace... Each projectile can exist at precise coordinates, find its target... and destroy it. Its threat is absolute."
EMPEROR: "Marvelous. It's a wonder we didn't think of it decades ago -- -- my new Galaxy Weapon is sure to inspire obedience. It means the end of the Rebel Alliance! This weapon can destroy a city... a land mass... or even an entire planet anywhere in the galaxy. Everything is falling into place as I have foreseen."
========================
-Dark Empire II
========================
At that very moment, young Emperor Palpatine is making an inspection tour of his new Galaxy Gun.
UMAK LETH: "We're relieved you chose to return to us, Emperor."
EMPEROR: "I could not have done otherwise, Leth. Now explain the operation of this new weapon to me."
LETH: "Of course, Your Majesty! As you already know, its purpose is to launch intelligent projectiles into hyperspace... Each projectile can exist at precise coordinates, find its target... and destroy it. Its threat is absolute."
EMPEROR: "Marvelous. It's a wonder we didn't think of it decades ago -- -- my new Galaxy Weapon is sure to inspire obedience. It means the end of the Rebel Alliance! This weapon can destroy a city... a land mass... or even an entire planet anywhere in the galaxy. Everything is falling into place as I have foreseen."
========================
-Dark Empire II
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Obviously, you have no sense of scale whatsoever. Suggestion: purchase a calculator, and then go to public school and ask the grade 5 math teacher what the equations for volume of a sphere and a cylinder are.Crossover_Maniac wrote:It doesn't seem anymore outlandish than any of the other explanations.Ender wrote:Are your trying to claim that the DS could use the same technology as the Galaxy Gun, but in beam form?
"It's not evil for God to do it. Or for someone to do it at God's command."- Jonathan Boyd on baby-killing
"you guys are fascinated with the use of those "rules of logic" to the extent that you don't really want to discussus anything."- GC
"I do not believe Russian Roulette is a stupid act" - Embracer of Darkness
"Viagra commercials appear to save lives" - tharkûn on US health care.
http://www.stardestroyer.net/Mike/RantMode/Blurbs.html
"you guys are fascinated with the use of those "rules of logic" to the extent that you don't really want to discussus anything."- GC
"I do not believe Russian Roulette is a stupid act" - Embracer of Darkness
"Viagra commercials appear to save lives" - tharkûn on US health care.
http://www.stardestroyer.net/Mike/RantMode/Blurbs.html