All of the "many guides".StarWarsStarTrek wrote:All? What about the ICS?Mr. Oragahn wrote: Many guides never paid much attention to what happened on screen. Yet all of them were going with the fusion core idea.
Not all guides.
I'm hardly assuming anything. As pointed out a gazillion times now, the vast majority of sources, even the database, say the core is fusion based.You're assuming the use of nuclear fusion.The bestest fusion mechanism could release 6.3 e14 J/kg.
So to get to 2.4 e32 J, you need 3.75 e17 kg (3.75 e14 tonnes) of fuel. That's hundred of trillions tonnes of fuel.
Of course, to meet the real objectives set by Saxton, you actually need a million times more fuel.
3.75 e23 kg.
Almost a sixteenth of Earth's entire mass (5.9736 e24 kg) in stellar fuel.
Nice to see you repeatedly ignore those facts.
Oh, of course. You'd first have to read those quotes.
What Saxton claims is not a random claim of transformation of matter to energy, which even mere combustion is, but a very specific one; that of annihilation, which is a whole different beast than fusion.As I recall, merely the term 'fusion' is used; a term that technically applies to M/AM conversion.
Only in Saxton's own addition to the ICS.As far as we know, hypermatter may very well require fusion.
In the database and the EU novel "Rogue Planet", hypermatter is identified as fusion; directly in the first, and absolutely logically in the second, since the fuel is clearly identified as ice asteroids (rich for water, and thus pretty good for fusion), and nothing else is said about another reactor or type of fuel.
The OT:ICS didn't claim anything about the nature of hypermatter. It only said hypermatter and that was all.
In fact, only the Death Star used hypermatter, instead of the claims that it was actually found in a wide variety of warships, as per the Saxtonian entries in the last two prequels' ICSes.
Hypermatter = fusion is therefore clearly defined in two novels.
It's identified as tachyonic in both the AOTC:ICS and the novel "Death Star".
The Saxtonian view is that hypermatter is annihilated, so the energy produced is simply derived from E=mc².
The Death Star novel does not make any direct relation to the working of a hypermatter core and the power output.
We have two different quotes:
His nephew, Hora Graneet, had been a navy spacer on the Imperial-class Star Destroyer Mark
II class vessel, which had been selected for a shakedown cruise testing one of the improved
prototype hypermatter reactors. Tenn didn't know the specifics of what had happened, and
didn't have anything close to the math needed to understand it anyway. He knew that
hypermatter existed only in hyperspace, that it was composed of tachyonic particles, and that
charged tachyons, when constrained by the lower dimensions of realspace, produced
near-limitless energy. How this "null-point energy" had become unstable he didn't know. He
only knew it had been powerful enough to turn an ISD-II and its crew of thirty-seven thousand
people into floating wisps of ionized gas in a microsecond.
The author may have been inspired by Saxton's page:
... but decided to go on their own and define the constriction of hypermatter to real space is what produced the energies.acceleration of tachyons
If “hypermatter” consists of intrinsically faster-than-light particles (tachyons) in some harnessed (perhaps gyrating) form then they could in principle be used as a power source. The act of accelerating a tachyon from c up to infinite speed (considering the complex, supra-light Lorentz-transformations) unleashes all of the particle's mass-energy. This is analogous to the deceleration of ordinary sub-light particles, which however have a lower energy limit mc². A tachyon accelerated to infinite speed and zero energy becomes less like matter and more effectively an omnipresent wave of zero intensity — intangible to the ordinary world. Such a process would achieve complete mass-energy conversion without needing to react this exotic fuel with any antiparticle. The power output would depend on the rate at which the “reactor” can decelerate available fuel, and not upon any reaction process.
It actually pulls the idea that the dimension of hyperspace is higher, while this is not necessary when dealing with tachyons as far as I get it.
Anyway, I doubt the authors explored the question that much, and in the end we're dealing with something that is not sounding exactly like what Saxton may have gone with.
Actually, it would be up to you, SWST, to prove that it is.
Still, the limit remains at the mass of the particle.
So when we read this:
It took no more than an instant. Tenn knew that the beam's total destructive power was much
bigger than matter-energy conversions limited to realspace. At full charge, the hyper-matter
reactor provided a superluminal "boost" that caused much of the planet's mass to be shifted
immediately into hyperspace. As a result, Alderaan exploded into a fiery ball of eye-smiting
light almost instantaneously, and a planar ring of energy reflux-the "shadow" of a hyperspatial
ripple-spread rapidly outward.
It is literally telling us that we're dealing with something that doesn't even work with annihilation as we get it.
It is actually very easy to understand the term "power" as capacity here, as it conveniently means that the beam has the capacity to end producing energy, in some way, that is vaster than the energy the beam itself could have carried after being generated by the best power generation method belonging to realspace.
See, it even goes against the former paragraph, because the former paragraph said that the energy was produced when hypermatter was bound to the lower dimension of real space.
In this later paragraph, we're told that the reaction is not bounds to the limitations of real space: it happens outside of them.
Even more proof that what goes on does not directly originate from the core.
Still, annihilation or not, the masses needed to achieve that much energy, if they were to be totally carried by starships, are simply asburd. We're talking about something like a tenth of the Moon's mass, when that object is like 3474 km wide. All that cramped into fuel bottles occupying a fraction of a station either 120 or 160 km wide.
In AOTC:ICS, the "annihilation reactant" (fuel) held in silos of the Acclamator is "denser than the ship's bulk by many orders of magnitude."
I just have to wonder what the tidal effects would have been on Endor with having such a mass in close orbit of the sanctuary planet/moon...
How do you want to close that case? We have a clear contradiction.However, when we are encountered with a contradiction, the best bet is to rationalize them. Some sources imply hypermatter, others imply fusion; the AOTC ICS gives us the rationalization that fusion is used in conjunction with hypermatter. Case closed.
All sources saying that the Death Star is powered by fusion, plus those liken hypermatter to fusion, and the two that make hypermatter be tachyonic based, with one declaring annihilation while the other remains silent on the question. Let's also note that the one that makes the declaration is extremely suspicious, for all reasons known. Would you rely on a source that's known to sprout as much bullshit as possible per paragraph, or one that thus far never really acted in such a confrontational way as to be so problematic?
Most reasonable people try to stay away from the books written or influenced by Saxton. That's more than thus two ICSes by the way.
No, you don't understand that a theory like that doesn't need to explain the intricate physics of it. You just need to find clues and links. Here, the fact that energy is clearly not provided by the core (it couldn't, it's fusion based, and didn't do enough damage to Despayre at the first two shots), and the fact that hyperspace was involved.Darkstar is not understanding the fact that the burden of proof lies on him.
It's that simple.
Bull.Wrong. The only sources you use are one part from the Death Star novel (even though that very novel confirms blatantly that the Death Star uses hypermatter) and some sections from the database that point to fusion as the power source.You have hardly provided any rationalization at all. Instead, you focus on bits from a few sources and limit yourself to that, denying everything else.
I provided several quotes from several sources describing the Death Star or the working of superlasers, either from the Death Star or the Eclipse. Those are quotes which you completely ignored.
And there again, you project your denial.
They work for me.Occam's razor and common sense.
The DET simply fails even before Occam's razor comes into play!
Hint: you don't appeal to Occam's razor when your theory doesn't even fit with the fact to begin with, as the OR is made to sorsst out theories that work.
You should know how to use OR better.
*sigh*On the contrary, the layperson with at least high school science is going have heard of main sequence stars, in which case they will assume a G class star.Already covered by JMS and I provided the link to his post several times. I also pointed out the same thing. The layperson knows nothing about what a main sequence star is. The layperson doesn't even use the term star to begin with. They often say "a sun".
And lol @ laypeople not using the term star.
You're just pure gold in comedy, you know that? How can anyone take you seriously after such asinine claims. This is pathetic.
The layperson says solar system all the time for example. Drop that disturbing nonsense about the average joe knowing what a main sequence star is supposed to be, or the even more ludicrous idea that said person would know anything about the ratios relative to each star type.
1. You just blatanly ignored an entire section of my post that has shown that there's no such implication. It's a direct statement. You didn't even read what I wrote.What? Saying that the database implies the use of fusion? Then take fusion and the raw power statement. One supports me, another supports you.Already addressed. I even did it again, in detail, in my former post (to which you replied with a very erroneous dodge, as we'll see).
2. I proved that based on fusion, you couldn't carry around enough mass to produce the energy necessary to meet the lowest of Saxton's figures. You even quote the calculation at the top of the post.
And you dare claim you're not trolling?
Yeah, good thing that providing this figure hardly changes anything.The amount of energy needed to do that is 5.9 * 10^31 joules.Never denied that Alderaan was reduced to rubble/pebbles/rock bits. But that's the same database from which you cherry pick your evidence.
I'm speaking of the Death Star's destruction.Why? The visual footage clearly shows that the planet's mass was scattered at more than escape velocity.So? Who denied that? And ANH's novelization says the second Death Star, ready to shoot (at full) exploded and released "the energy of a small artificial sun", which is just too detailed to pass as mere equivocation. Even if for some reason, the capacitors didn't release their energy, we know that upon firing, the main reactor is online and works at full.
We will certainly notice that when it exploded, the spaceships in space didn't blow up.
Yet, at best, just like for Alderaan, the Death Star has a range of 6 planetary diameters.
Assuming Yavin IV was like Alderaan or Earth (radius: 6371 km), we get a maximum distance of 76,452 km.
Applied to a sphere, that's a maximum surface area of 7.345 e16 m².
Okay, let's work with 2.4 e32 J,
You literally butcher my paragraph, fail to correctly read it, post some unrelated figure about scaling down the power based on volume -a figure I know but which has absolutely nothing to do with what I'm explaining- and you ask what my point is?Which scales down to about 5e22 joules for an ISD. What was your point?and say that the core generally works for 12 hours (43,200 seconds) to store that much energy.
That is still 5.556 e27 W.
Ok, let's just pretend that you're honest and that you really missed the point. See below:
It's rather obvious. I'm calculating how much the core released when the whole battle station blew up. We can obtain very solid figures which go against DET, and the only rationalization is to have the vast majority of the battle station -and I mean a majority that's like half a dozen orders of magnitude or more- got sucked into hyperspace.Maybe I am not reading this well enough, but I have no idea what you're trying to say here.Now let's divide that by our sphere's surface area, and we get an intensity of 75.65 e9 J/m² at the known superlaser's maximum range.
In other words, we already are at the limit of an intensity level which we know has taken down X-wing sized fighters in movies.
Of course, it only gets worse if we start to take into account the release of energy from the capacitors, and if we work with Saxton's upper limit, which was 3.4 e38 J. Or with the fact that the ships were nowhere close to Yavin IV when the Death Star exploded, as a matter of fact.
Heck, the very explosion of the Death Star was far from being impressive at all. Certainly nowhere close to anything like the power of a star like Sol, which is still "capped" at 3.839 e26 W.
An attempt at solving this issue would be to argue that most of the Death Star's ionized mass got sucked into hyperspace as well. The rings would tend to prove that something like that may have happened.
Which would prove, then, that there's so much of matter that gets sucked into hyperspace that there's no reason this wouldn't happen to Alderaan as well, and therefore continue to molest Saxton's figures.
Oh I know, you'll continue to complain with that 0.9999999% percentage or whatever, but facts are facts. Your protests are vain.
Ah, now it's "quotes" instead of sources. No, sorry dude, you fail again. I already proved that if I dissected a source like you did, I could pop the quotes counter very easily. Like by using the database's article, allowing me 4 or 5 different "quotes" right off the bat.Seven different quotes. You haven't provided anywhere near that number supporting your stance.You know what? What you are doing is not citing 7 diffrent sources. You've splitted "Death Star" into two. You only provided 6 different sources.
And things would just get ugly if I were to apply the same method to all the quotes I provided about the DS core and superlasers -those you deny the very existence of.
I would pretty much appreciate if I had not to repeat myself about his on and on and on.
And, to the risk of repeating myself for another round of ten strikes, it's said to be fusion based. Can't compute, little SWST?...and?
- Just one core, and it's said a "hypermatter reactor".
Yes, it is, in this article.No, that's not true.- This reactor is described as being "fusion based" (so hypermatter = fusion, and that's also in agreement with another source we rarely cite, here, from the ICS thread you didn't really read).
We're not talking about that book but taking a look at the very article you keep pretending goes your way, merely because in reality you cherry pick it, as I have proven in my former post (and which you didn't even read).The book Star Wars: Death Star explicitly states that hypermatter reactors exceed M/AM conversion in energy potential.
...And even if hypermatter = fusion, it does not mean nuclear fusion.
The only other broad meaning of fusion is melting. Oh, yes, so the core is based on melting.
It all makes sense!
...
Why am I losing my time with you again?
WTF?And? A large chemical explosion was more powerful than the photon torpedo payload of the Enterprise.- Uses "stellar fuel".
More Star Drek red herring?
And it's stellar fuel for fusion (nuclear fusion, in case you keep wondering).And?- Fuel is carried in "bottles lining [the core's] periphery" (meaning most likely that only a moderate fraction of the Death Star volume is dedicated to fuel storage).
No, I think you just don't know enough about the basics of science. I wouldn't claim to be a genius in the domain, but there clearly are some basics you don't have there.
It's sad, but one needs to know a thing or two about physics before attempting to seriously debate a versus topic.
You obviously don't pass.
Strawman.In other words, you're claiming that the clear, onscreen footage showing the planet visibly being scattered at extreme velocities is just an illusion.- The tributary beams coalesce "into one single blast with the intensity of a stellar core", for which you'd need to aim at hypergiant stars (millions of solar luminosities) to hope reach the 2.4 e32 J mark. Needless to say, you will never get above that, and yet we know it's extremely necessary for DETists.
In other words, go suck your sore thumb.
Strawjuice.In other words, you think that e32 joules is not impressive, and that it somehow helps your argument.
Because I already did it multiple times.Why don't you actually send your quotes, instead of threatening to do so?
Oh see, at least 4 safe, perhaps 5.
Want me to look at other sources? Like, all the quotes I provided which you repeatedly fail to consider?
No, so stop that nonsense. Your evidence is outnumbered. Period.
I posted the quotes, then posted links to the post that contains them several times, everytime when you denied their existence.
At some point I just grew tired of doing it again and again.
So go read the thread.
Now!
Obviously. :|Once again, you have no idea what the word fusion means.Yes, addressed, since that's exactly what the database leads us to. Fusion based reactor, not magic based reactor, and stellar fuel. You know, the bits you ignore. So I don't care if that hurts your preconceptions.
It's not like you completely failed to debunk my conclusions based on the first Despayrean shot, yes? ;)
...
Wait!
You were serious?
You mean SEVERAL other canon sources (books, guides) of equal level, plus the novelization, plus the analysis of the movie.Once again, you fail to actually rationalize or explain the ICS quote, instead of just waving it away by citing another equal canon status quote.
No. The AOTC rationalizes nothing because it claims hypermatter cores are encased in fusion cores. It's absolutely alone in claiming that, and several other sources outright contradict this (including your beloved database article which I returned against you).Listen Mr. O; when two equal canon status sources collide, you rationalize both sources together. Your idea is to just wave away mine because you feel like it. The AOTC ICS provides a rationalization for this.You think I'm new to this?
See above. What the ICS and the database describe are two different cats.
Could you cram more lies into one single line?The database is the only source you've provided so far; meanwhile, four seperate sources imply or state the use of hypermatter.No, I mean the many sources that say it's fusion based, including the very database you cherry pick your evidence from.
"The database is the only source you've provided so far" -- false. Besides, it were you who provided it to begin with. Oh, wait, I guess that means I provided no source at all!!!!1!!!
" meanwhile, four seperate sources imply or state the use of hypermatter." -- see earlier half of this post. The ICS claims a different kind of hypermatter based on annihilation instead of fusion, and the "Death Star" novel doesn't really tell anything aside from the fact that it's tachyon based, which is the only point thus far that it shares with the ICS. The OT:ICS stays mute on the question. The database goes against it, so does the note about the EBP in "Rogue Planet".
lol.Stupid strawman attempt. Whether or not it's perfect, it just oh so happens to blatantly support DET FAR more smoothly than it does fit with chain reaction.It's certainly not elegant, granted. It's not like the ICS is absolutely perfect.
So you don't even know what a strawman is? Where the fuck am I putting words into your putrid mouth, pray tell?
Just putting the accuracy of the OT:ICS into perspective, that's all.It was an artistic drawing. Is this the best poisoning the well fallacy you can attempt?See the way it depicts the destruction of Alderaan, despite the fact that it was the easiest bit not to mess up.
Funny how they fucked up one of the easiest things to put into that book.
By what? The films clearly show at least an e32 joule event, part of the database supports it, SW: DS supports it, where is this imaginary army of sources that you claim? Why don't you clearly list out all of the sources that overrule a blatant statement?

Damn. Heavy metals... for fusion?Oh, that portion of the database is among the only sources that supports you, and even then it's in a sketchy angle; the term fusion can apply to more than just nuclear fusion.You would be correct if you had not proved that you constantly ignored how I pointed out the database disagreed with you, as well as ignored all the quotations I already provided about superlasers and the Death Star's reactor design.
EGVV: ""heavy metals, liquid reactants, or virtually any substance" is what fusion reactors in SW use.
No, listen suzie, just post the entire quote from that EGVV, and we'll see by how much you just shot your own foot there.
See, there are those big orange plumes. Those are clearly expanding fast for a very few frames, then come to a form of near-halt. Magic? Yaaaaaay!No it doesn't. And if it did, using a stopwatch you could time the debris velocity to be at hypersonic to relativistic speeds. There is no denying this; it's on screen, irrefutable evidence.We'll also see how you use just one shrunk screen capture instead of the whole sequence.
The one that shows the explosion actually slowing down.
What "superlaser theory"?And the superlaser theory cannot explain this either. Stop applying double standards.Or the delayed secondary explosion, which no DETist has been able to ever explain.
How can it get more dishonest than that, I don't know.
What I'm saying is relatively simple. The DET camp has always failed to explain the delay. Actually, Wong has simply denied it. So no need for any explanation.
When did I say that there wasn't that much energy?Ah, you think that you're so clever, eh? Talking smack on the internet?Clearly, the electrochemical signal between your eyes and your brain gets lost en route.
Why don't you rationalize and explain how a planet's mass is accelerated at escape velocity or more without said energy being imparted at it.
It's like the hundredth time I'm correcting you on this strawman.
Explain where such stellar amounts of energy came from. Explain why NOBODY EVER MENTIONS THIS in ANY tech novel, nor does any character EVER mention this, but has no problem with MARVELING at the reactor, which is apparently only 0.00000000001% of the power.
Explain why the DS novel explicitly states that hypermatter EXCEEDS MASS-ENERGY CONVERSION IN REAL SPACE.

It doesn't state that the reactor does that. It states that the beam's power does that.
Which fits with what non-DETists claim : the beam, which is funky, clearly has the capability to trigger a reaction that releases that much energy. It has that power, indeed, and it does so by violating rules of realspace, which goes against what the same book said earlier on about how hypermatter reactors would work (by constraining hypermatter to realspace, and therefore its rules, which produces energy).
Besides, there's that funny bit from "Death Star";
The smuggler smiled. "Let us say, for the sake of argument, that the battle station under
construction is large enough to hold, oh, six or eight such weapons, as well as a hypermatter
reactor that could power a small planet. And that it is possible to focus all of this energy into a
single beam-by the largest and most powerful magnetic ring ever made." He looked
expectantly at Ratua.
Mmm... apparently, powering a small planet requires a huuuuge reactor. Doesn't really bode well for those who love to claim incredible power production densities.