Mr. Oragahn wrote:Doesn't work. That kind of acceleration would have allowed all Cubes to outrun the expanding cloud of matter that once was a planet. We're talking about an acceleration wherein a Cube goes from zero to a speed where it travels its own length per second within one or two frames.
Explanation: that kind of burst is exceptional and cannot be sustained more than the equivalent of one or two frames.
Right, in other words we're handwaving it away? What exactly is this contradiction you're talking about anyway? That the cubes got caught by the debris of the exploding planet? 
It's not a dumb argument.
It is. Because fireball duration assumes that the nuclear fireball has an unlimited amount of air to travel through, and it assumes air density doesn't decrease the higher up the ball is flung.
The formula is flawed for explosions that are in the gigaton plus range. If you want to use this formula, then I want to see an explanation that factors in the fireball hitting the 'roof of the sky', if you want to put it in a poetic way.
Not only it would be necessary, for you, to first show that the event is indeed beyond one gigaton, but the upper atmospheric pancaking effect is totally irrelevant because for an explosion to go that far up in the sky, it has to be very powerful
Yeah, about a gigaton or so. The Tsar Bomba, at full yield (100 megatons) was supposed to have been strong enough to do this on its own, as an example.
and thus will emit copious amounts of energy for long long times, and that, we didn't get it in the episode.
A nuclear bomb releases its energy somewhere between a nano-second and a micro-second. After that, how the explosion behaves is entirely dependant on its surroundings.
Like I said, a flash that stays for three frames or so makes no sense when even a minor megaton nuke will shine for much more time before the fireball cools down to levels where we can see the mushroom cloud itself without being blinded by the light diffused through the atmosphere.
Seeing something from within the atmosphere and seeing it from extremely high orbit are two completly different things.
You cannot declare that SoE's explosion "it's close enough" when you have, a few sentences earlier, admitted not even remembering how it looks like in the episode.
Of course I can. If you can say "it's not close enough" I can say "it's close enough", because the difference between this and any other explosion in sci-fi is completly arbitrary. There are no explosions that look realistic in sci-fi when it comes to multi-megaton stuff. Thus, drawing a line between what's good enough and what isn't is entirely up to the person drawing the line.
It's subjective, in other words.
No, because that's just you playing games when you know fully well that we're all considering all the material we already talked about at length here and at SBC.
Every single time I see you encountering something that can be quantified, you analyse it in the same way: You set out assuming it can't be more then a few megatons at the most, and then you try to get the evidence to fit that assumption. You did it last SBC thread, and you've done it twice this thread already (tar monster and the defiant). The reasoning behind this is always the same: Higher numbers "don't fit" because of the rest of the evidence.
I don't happen to suddenly reset my memories about past debates, contrary to what you seem to suggest, and such memories don't tell me there's any reason to logically and even seriously consider Obsession and the sound wave of doom to be acceptable and fit with most of Trek material.
I don't reset my memories either, which should be obvious from what I'm saying right now. And as a point in my favor, I tend not to strawman other people like you're currently doing by always appealing to the soundwave, even though I haven't so much as mentioned it yet.
Yet it's very simple. We have example of real nuclear atmospheric explosions to look at. We have made up large scale explosions which, for some of them, do look like "close enough" and, with logic, we can assert what would reasonnably happen in basic conditions with a single bomb releasing energy in an atmosphere.
That doesn't answer my question in the least. Who made you the guy that says "This is close enough and this isn't"? Yes, I realize some explosions look more realistic then others, but that's beside the point. What I'm asking is why you think you have the authority to draw the line between "this is ok" and "this isn't ok".
The answer is: No one did.
Just as you can say "this isn't close enough" I can say "this is close enough".
You seem to think that I considered this example unfit just because. That's preposterous, and that's borderline arguing that I have a "nerf Star Trek" agenda.
No offense, but this is exactly the way you come off, when you repeatedly state "this doesn't fit with the rest of the material, let's ignore it."
Occam would primarily laugh at the idea of trying to get a yield out of a ludicrous decades old explosion effect.
That's where he'd stand first and foremost.
Alright then. Let's go with intent rather then visuals. Star Trek ships now fly around at fractions of c, engage each other at ranges around thousands of kilometers and TDiC is to my knowledge the only incident of planetary destruction where we have firm non-visual relient statements on what a starship can do.
Of course, this is not your intent, is it? Your intent is to analyse visuals when they suit you and ignore then when they don't.
The SoE event is certainly not the most problematic case I'd expect you to carry overboard, and you know it.
Then why are you trying so hard to dismiss it in various ways?
I obviously expect you to try to argue in favour of the clearly outerish yields, in the like of Obsession, the space sound wave with a crazy power, and even on a smaller rank, TDiC, which is already seen as a super wank high end and barely accepted once unhealthy extreme doses of "rare" and "NDF" crop up in the posts.
That's still a strawman. And a rather blatant one at that.
I see you start pretending this is about emotional knee jerking and "opinions", but thus far you pretty much have made very little attempt to address most of these cases on their own by thinking scientifically,
IMO, I was going about things rather scientifically when I pointed out the over-simplistic ways you use to quantify fireballs. I also think I was doing a proper job at pointing out the logical inconsistancies in your arguments, when you sometimes say 'let's look at visuals' and other times say 'let's ignore visuals', etc.
 
l33telboi wrote:Good points safe that storing is obviously not a problem at all.
Antimatter requires more elaborate storage setup by default. You can store deuterium in a cup. This is just basic scientific fact.
The way Trek powers mess with AM is actually completely crazy, but they seem so sure of their containment technology that we'd call that nothing more than fundamentalism.
Doesn't change the fact that storing deuterium is easier.
Of course, that's your problem. You pretend that I do it randomly, which is not the case, and anyone with an ounce of logic would laugh at the idea of prepared Voyager being menaced by a shuttle's overloading core located some hundreds of thousands of kilometers away, if not millions.
Personally I'd laugh at the idea of faster then light travel.
But.
Evidence seens to say it's possible, so what can you do?
Red Matter is allowed because we don't know how it works.
No, Red Matter is allowed because it exists in canon.
When something happens in a way that should not happen, because the premise is fairly simple, the case itself becomes extremely dubious and weak as evidence.
Canon equals fact. There's nothing dubious about it.
And sorry, but you can say canon treats it as fact, but versus debaters would laugh at anything absurd, safe when used as favourable evidence by those who see it fit for their arguments. Like, "OMG, one single underground low gigaton explosion will destroy all life on Earth!" claimed when surrounded by a legion of extremely bright scientists, including who already did blow a sun up.
That's not a particularly hard problem to solve: She was referring to secondary effects.
Not that I understand why you always seem to want Stargate into this. And naturally, it's just dialogue. She could've misspoken. Simple as that.
Nope. We'd have to pick a handful of low teraton torps for the Cardassian's joyful claim to start making sense
Then this means that this particular episode is evidence for low teraton torpedoes, isn't it? But see, you don't want to acknowledge that. You simply want to dismiss it, saying that it's at the most evidence for megaton-range torpedoes.
How well does this fit with the rest of canon? Who knows.
The beauty of it is that of course, we have room to argue that it's mere hyperbole in the heat of an exchange to convince someone of laying as much waste of a community of special people living on a planet as possible, trying to strike as many kills as possible for the highest achievable Foudner holocaust.
It's possible, of course. But in itself the episode suggests no such thing. So it's an assumption we'll resort to only if this doesn't mesh with the rest of the evidence.
Like I have nothing better to do than go through all of what I, you and plenty of other people have gone through here and at SFJN, just for your amusement.
I never asked you too. I'm asking you to go through the evidence you're analysing 
right now properly.
What? Stop lying for a second. I precisely acknowledged that with the highest and absolutely literal interpretation of it, it makes it a high showing. I just happen not to think it works.
You quite literally tried to say this is a display of at most megaton-scale stuff a while ago.