Ok. That is way better! :)Mike DiCenso wrote:Antimatter is not run through the nacelles at all. It is stored in at least the secondary hull in containment pods, and the antimatter is then piped into the warp core where it can interact with matter and produce the energy needed (in the form of plasma) which is then routed through power conduits all over the ship, most in particular coils in the warp nacelles.
But that's the way it's done.Having each torpedo sitting around loaded with antimatter now represents hundreds of potental failure points. But keeping the torpedo warheads unloaded and the antimatter stored in the (presumably) more robust pods, which reduces the statistical chance of a catastrophic failure. When you arm the torpedoes, you are now filling the torpedoes with reactants, and setting them to dedonate on a specific target.
In Enterprise, they had those photonic torps, they were just stored on racks, with warheads inside, and the launching mechanism never made a mention of a system that charges the warhead before firing.
Actually, looking at the models used for the photon torpedoes, I see no "fuel" port within the region of the warheads, on the hull of the torps.
However, this charging procedure would explain how they can dial the power of a torp up or down. But then, let's be clear.
If the Enterprise actually had a way to charge a photonic torp before firing it, then they would have no problem to create even archaic photonic torpedoes, since they'd precisely know how to drive antimatter and contain it, until they'd dump it into the warhead located inside a torp.
And what is a gravimetric warhead anyway? How does it work? You are presuming that it is something like your assumed version of how the antimatter works so that you can maintain a particular yeild, and are not basing it on anything other than you think there is a reactant in there all ready and armed to go, which we can surmise reasonably that there is not since phasers (or phase cannons) and torpedoes alike must actually be armed as we have seen in all the series.
It's not a problem of how it works. It's a problem of what it uses to generate the yield. Since I haven't been given any evidence that they use something better than antimatter, we pretty much know how destructive they could be.And you know how a gravimetric warhead works.... how?So this 3 kg gravimetric warhead would have a real destructive force of 42.96 megatons, at best.
That is, if:
- the reaction is always near perfect, which I always assume. This is not a given.
- the warhead doesn't sacrifice room to achieve that gravimetric function, in comparison to a standard AM warhead which goal is just to make all the antideuterium react with the matter, and go boom as violently as possible.
- a gravimetric warhead actually mostly uses antimatter. If not, they yield would be stringly lower, but it would be way too low to make it fit with the rest, so that's why I go with AM.
Yes, I knew.The two hatches are open:In Omega Directive, IIRC, the two side hatches were open. I think the warheads of a standard torp were removed.
Instead, they placed a single gravimetric warhead.
They said that this was equal to 54 IT, as they set it to be.
http://voy.trekcore.com/gallery/display ... 171&pos=92
Either they removed one standard warhead, and were making adjustments on the one left, to work with the gravi, or they removed both, left a slot empty and put one single gravi warhead.
They only talked about a gravimetric warhead:
Any cap?But as we've seen in ST6, a torpedo has more than just warheads behind those hatches. Or at least the ones of that particular era did.
How is it relevant?
And so the part where Janeway comes back and ask for the yield to be pushed up to 80 isotons has been cut?Actually here's the as-filmed dialog from the episode:The fact that Janeway asked Tuvok and Kim to get 80 IT out of the same warhead means that 54 IT is not the maximum yield of that warhead, and thus pointing out that a gravimetric warhead can be dialed up/down, maybe only manually.
TUVOK: Calibration complete. Phase modulator. Detonator circuits?
KIM: On standby.
TUVOK: We're ready to load the gravimetric charge.
KIM: This looks like enough for a fifty isoton explosion.
TUVOK: Fifty four, to be exact.
KIM: What are we planning to do, blow up a small planet?
TUVOK: I don't know.
KIM: This warhead isn't standard issue. Who designed it, the Captain?
JANEWAY: Mister Kim, you ask too many questions. Change of plans, Gentlemen. Increase the charge to eighty isotons.
We don't know if they actually are altering that particular warhead, or are removing it and putting a different one in it's place.
In your case, you wouldn't want to have any greater yield with the same warhead. It would only make one isoton ever weaker.That we know of. There is no actual stated upper limit given in the episode.We'll consider that 80 IT is the maximum yield obtainable with the gravimetric warhead.
Besides, it would be a bit odd to make changes to the gravimetric warhead and ask for it to be pumped up to 80 IT, if the charging would actually occur when the warhead is armed.
It's pointless to make manual changes to the warhead if, per your idea, a yield (the quantity of AM that can be dumped into a warhead) is achieved just before the warhead is armed.
Wonderful science! :)Only making the gravimetric warhead being like 5-6 kg heavy starts to solve problems reasonnably, but the way the warhead is handled, it's stretching credibility.
Assuming it's loaded, of course, which we have no way to know if it is. And there is an additional possibility: Uber antimatter:
www.ditl.org/hedarticle.php?9
In TOS' "Obsession", less than one ounce (28 grams) of antimatter is sufficent to blow off half an Earth-like planet's atmosphere...
Do you expect me to take that seriously? -_-
A single bullet can kill a human. A virus can kill a human. A biomechanical disorder in a key organ can kill a human.... while in "The Immunity Syndrome", a probe-carried antimatter charge was sufficent to destroy the planet-sized amoeba.
Damage the nuclei of the amoeba, and voilà .
Mike Wong (...) laughed at the claim, considering that it lasted a fraction of a second.Is it really a second long "flash"? Is there a clip of this event available somewhere?Is that the semi bright "flash" that last less than one second?
If so, calling it a multimegaton would be wrong, and would be considered another VFX mistake. And therefore, you couldn't get a yield from that.
I don't know, but from what I've read on internet about it, here and there, it would show that there is, once again, a discrepancy. The flash duration would argue for a kiloton level explosion. The flash/explosion whatever would argue for something bigger. But if the fireball is just somekind of stock explosion FX pasted on... duh.
Anyway, until further notice, and until there's a decent way to look at it, we won't know.
Maybe I'll grab the episode, but I won't be able to cut the segment and upload it.