I don't care what you presume to be obvious, making blanketed claims as you are doing requires evidence. I don't care if you tell me 2+2 = 4, you best damn well back it up. And I find it absolutely funny that you presume that because an ISD doesn't have warp drive it doesn't bend space at all.SpaceWizard wrote: Not if it's obvious.
Warp-drive involves bending space, just like gravity does; and ISD's don't have warp-drive.
I didn't call you stupid, I was shocked that you would claim something with the associated mass of the death star doesn't have greater stress points than something hundreds, thousands, or millions of times smaller. You act like just because it is in space it doesn't' have to deal with gravity or the laws of physics suddenly.That's one of those things when someone calls you "stoopid," i.e. it's a rock thrown by someone in a greenhouse.
I'm under no illusions of anything. You can, of course, prove that the death star is incapable of propulsion beyond hyperspace, yes? I'm pretty sure there are some EU sources that claim otherwise, since it would be stupid to make a station incapable of adjusting its orbit or moving to some degree.Artificial gravity works both ways, and the DS was built in zero gravity.
But the DS doesn't "move around planets--" it pops up in hyperspace and WAITS for them to orbit into range; they don't call it a "station" for laughs.
Obviously you're under the illusion that the DS was rocketing around Yavin in order to zap the Rebel base; but somehow you missed the absence of BIG HONKIN' THRUSTERS, like on the ISD's.
The first part is not relevant to the conversation, and yes, if you want to build something like the death star without it collapsing in on itself it's pretty damn impressive... the death star itself emits gravity, all sorts of neat things emit gravity.More like just lots of time and resources to waste building a big tub of junk that gets hulled in one shot. Oh yeah, it takes a miracle to build something in the zero gravity of outer space.
Clearly you don't understand it as well as you pretend... or much else.
I threw nothing, I made a statement of your apparent ignorance on the subject of blackholes.And the glass-house dweller throws one more stone....
You will provide your math, or your source, right? Or is this going to be another one of those 'it's just obvious' things?Actually a black hole at the middle of an earth-sized planet, would require no more than 22 minutes for the planet to be entirely consumed.
*headdesk*Manipulating time and gravity are technically the same thing. However losing containment of a warp-drive is always pretty destructive.
We shall just ignore how bringing up the antimatter has nothing to do with the topic... Naturally though if we need to go back to it, you'll tell me how much antimatter was on board, correct? Moving on...
We've also seen Federation starships destroyed, and we don't see the anti-matter doing what it does elsewhere when unleashed.
More like it dissipates in both cases-- with the Romulan ship it's due to the small size, since normally it takes something 3x the mass of the sun to keep it from dissipating.
However in both cases, that's not the same as losing containment.
You can quantify the mass of said singularities, their density? How about how they are contained? I mean if it just evaporates away after doing some damage to the surrounding deck then it wasn't very impressive, and I'm willing to bet puts less stress on the ship than the death star puts on itself by existing. I digress, this is clearly not going to get us anywhere any time soon.
Tell you what, when you come back with some evidence for the stuff you're saying, rather than just saying it I'll start to take you seriously. Till then, enjoy. The last one like you I wasn't a big fan of and it caused some problems, as such I shall respect the mods enough to leave things civil and leave the thread for now. See ya on the forums SW.