StarWarsStarTrek wrote:Nowhere did I say that I support a 1e38 watt Death Star hypermatter reactor. I do, however, support the idea; and basically canon fact, that the Death Star's hypermatter reactor is in the 1e32 watt range, which is still orders of magnitude greater than the power generation of the Federation in its entire existence. In fact, it's more energy than the entire human race in both modern day and Star Trek have produced in history too.
So sure, the Death Star doesn't have a 1e38 watt reactor...it has about a 1e32 watt reactor...which still beats Star Trek...by slightly less. OMG.
You're mixing watts and joules. The Death Star's reactor had to charge up for hours in order to be ready to fire a superlaser shot. (A number of EU sources specify at least a full day, in fact.) Power is energy per unit time. That means e27-e28, not e32,
watts is the correct calculation for your interpretation - using, generously, Sunlike, non-red dwarf stars as the benchmark.
1e32 joules would be more energy than the entire human race has produced to date; however, it is far less than the quantity of energy unleashed by humans in the whole of
Star Trek. Genesis created and then detonated a planet. A trilithium missile can explode a star.
Now, let me tell you what the calculation would be if I used a couple
median main-sequence stars, and the more common EU recharge time of 24 hours for the Death Star: About 2e30 joules (1% of the energy required to mass scatter a planet), and about 2e25 watts of power. This is
what Saxton believes an ISD can fire downrange. Or, in other words, a small fleet of ICS Acclamators.
Problematically,
that level of energy would
still be multiple orders of magnitude higher than the apparent strength of the first "one third power" shot from the Death Star in the novel. This is what the other posters in this thread have been pointing out to you; if they seem frustrated, it's because after the novel came out, we had a
fairly lengthy discussion here on the subject.
That said, you're still missing the point. The ICS are carefully constructed. Saxton has, or had, in his mind a fairly coherent model of what Star Wars looks like. It bears little relation to Lucas's Star Wars, but it is intended to be internally consistent. Saxton's model of Star Wars relies in no small part on the Death Star's beam being more or less an
actual laser, and that's totally incompatible with the
Death Star novel,
including the quote you're focusing on.
If you compare
my model of Star Wars with Saxton's model of Star Wars, it's pretty clear which one of us is describing something closer to what the
Death Star novel describes, and it's
still clear even when you decide to ignore 90% of the novel to focus on pulling a single quote out of context.
Now, I
don't go ignoring the context to focus on a single quote, as a general rule. I'll
start by looking at the single quote, but you have to look at it in the larger context, and the larger context, here, pretty clearly indicates that the reactor managing to explode itself is projected to release a lot more energy than the Death Star's superlaser requires. Which makes a lot of sense; if your reactor is operating within normal output parameters, it's not going to overload the safeties and blow everybody to kingdom come.