Jedi Master Spock wrote:SarahStar wrote:Absolutely, it's what creates 3-D space in the first place, i.e. a warping of 2-D flat space.
According to a model of physics consistent with transporter beams and fusion-powered FTL drives? Think about that carefully for a minute.
I’m not sure what you mean: it’s
essential to FTL (warp) drive., while there’s nothing inconsistent with transporter-beams.
Also, is inertia a vectored quantity, to be redirected or pushed against? Think about that carefully, too.
Of course, though it’s omnirectional like water in the ocean; if you push against it one way, you move in the other, like a submarine’s prop.
Actually it bears out that they're based on E-M rather than graviton-based. This would mean that EM-based pulses are applied against the surface of the planet, similar to EM-based ship-gravity.
Do you have anything more recent than early script ANH script drafts to base this on?
It’s demonstrated everywhere in their tech: Luke’s speeder, the cars on Coruscant, the troop-transports in AotC, Yoda’s hover-disc, the scout-bikes on Endor etc. They can rise a ways above the ground, and move vertically, but any higher requires engaging the ion-thrusters, just like Jango Fett’s jetpack uses A-R thrust.
99% of technology is "EM-based." That doesn't really say much.
So is very atom, which says everything.
All gravity is local to the object it affects, via local gravitons. However again if repulsors were EM-based, then it would need a local object to repulse against.
Then why talk about pushing against the
gravity well at all?
I never said anything about a gravity-well: I said the planet
itself, i.e. pushing directly against solid ground. The fact that repulsors only operate in the vicinity of a planet, indicates that they
are EM-based.
Saying that it's EM-based isn't really a simple explanation, IMO.
Simplicity is relative to the number of independent variables between alternatives: ergo it is the simplest explanation, since it
has fewest.
We know magnetic levitation. It's a pain in the butt to shoehorn with a ship that lifts off to several planetary diameters away.
Is there a G-canon example of ships lifting that high with repulsors? Even the AotC troop-transports have their ion-engines visibly engaged at takeoff, when shown transporting the clones at the end.
It's a pain in the butt to use EM fields to simulate gravity - you have a mix of paramagnetic and ferromagnetic materials with diamagnetic materials, and they tend not to move the same ways in EM fields. Then there's the trouble of having to shield devices from interference.
Again, this confuses simple magnetism, with electromagnetism used by atoms to give their solid properties: just like confusing electrons with simple electricity.
"Unknown physics"? Yes. That we don't see elsewhere and can't explain? No. We have three to five different technologies in this grouping in Star Wars alone: Shipboard artificial gravity, tractor beams, antigravity drive, shields, and repulsorlifts. Adding in Star Trek, of course, adds the warp field and impulse technologies to the list, along with perhaps a handful of miscellaneous rarely-seen technologies.
Again, it all comes down to the type of energy used, i.e. EM vs. gravitational. Of the two, gravitational is the higher tech, and would determine the winner in any encounter, just like flight.
Consider the following: you’re facing 1,000 Sherman tanks: and you’ve got one F-16 with an infinite number of armor-piercing bullets, while they have no anti-aircraft ability. Obviously you’re going to win, it’s just a matter of time.
ST explicitly uses graviton-manipulation technologies; if the two universes share a physics, as is more or less necessary to have a crossover scenario, then we are already forced to invent the precise same "unknown physics" that SW antigravity technology entails.
Every place in the universe shares the same physics. SW says that it takes place in a faraway galaxy: that
implies that it’s in the same universe. Ergo, it has the same physics.
Which is the simpler explanation: That the Federation has mastered graviton manipulation and uses it for artificial gravity and also the Star Wars galaxy uses an unknown highly sophisticated electromagnetic technique for mimicking the manipulation of gravitons, or that scientists of both universes have mastered the essentially similar arts of generating fields in which the direction and efficiency of interactions with gravity can be tightly controlled?
Neither. The simplest explanation is that while ST has mastered the use of gravitational energy, while SW is still stuck with EM-based, despite having advanced applications thereof.
Likewise, SW has tractor-beams, but no deflectors: in TESB, for example, the ISD is shown shooting the the asteroids to keep them from hitting the ship.
This fits well with EM-based tech, since it’s like attaching a cable to something: i.e. they can pull it, but not push it (though they can push
against something the solid ground of a planet at close distance). In contrast, ST has both tractors
and deflectors, indicative of gravitational tech.