Does this document you're referring to specifically talk about centrally buried explosives and surface mounted ones? I'm guessing no. But in either case I'd like to see it.Mr. Oragahn wrote:Checking some document paper I have about explosives, regardless of gravity, cratering a complete hemisphere of radius R, by placing a charge at the center of the hemisphere's base, would require 1.8 times more energy than cratering an entire spherical volume of a radius R, with the charge place in the middle.
I still don't why we should pretend the cratering formula for asteroids can be used to figure out how big of a crater a surface detonation would cause.I still don't see why we should ignore the formula for asteroid cratering as a yardstick.
Far as I know there's nothing that says the glow is shielding, as far the shows themselves go. The TM probably says as much, but that's non-canon.We have the entire show that shows the torps glowing like the entirety of Trek. I'm sorry, but that's the undisputable fact. Can you explain why these torps, with a solid casing, are sheathed in an aura of glowing energy like torps from TOS, TNG, DS9 and VOY, plus the movies?
Now can you explain this: Reed specifically says that even forcefields in the ENT era haven't been perfected and are still highly experimental. So how on Earth is it that suddenly Starfleet is capable of shielding torpedoes, when they can't shield ships, let alone create stable forcefields? Like I said - pretending the torpedoes are shielded is poppycock.
You said one thread was the first thread a formula was presented, I corrected that erroneous assertion by saying it was presented earlier. There's nothing more to it then that.I know, but you didn't provide a link to that thread, and I don't see how it matters.
I already said that if you want this to be factored in, then you need to know specifics. How much would an impact affect the outcome? And I want to see this work done by someone who knows what he's doing.We both know that former cases are used and applied to new ones, a bit like in law. We don't want people jump here and think that all parameters are OK if they want to check the power of a given super heavy device that left a given crater.
Yes, I've pointed out as much on numeral occasions.The difference with the other equations is that in the extended G&D, mgh adds energy via gravity, while the first part does not.
Which is clearly incorrect since we're not dealing with a lot of gravity here. Besides, I'm not quite sure I want to trust calculations that you've made up, especially not when they contradict formulas that are used today and empirical evidence.In the equations I brought forth, gravity is a factor of all the parameters.
From what I understand, the paper in question gives a wide number of different constants that relate to certain rock/soil types. The figure used there is one the author's of the paper used when dealing with typical rock... or was it simply typical dirt? I'm not sure.But do you know how X (in E = mX) is obtained?
I didn't perform the calculation myself since I don't have the paper where the formula is from.
Iysnic did, not me. In the aforementioned NX-class vs. Whitestar thread. I recall him and DoomFruit pondering the specifics on the figure later on on IRC, with the conclusion being that Iysnic was right and DoomFruit wrong in terms of what constant they'd used.You say it's all good and fitting, but where did you post anything about the method used to obtain X?
I still find it somewhat ludicrous to think we're talking about an asteroid made of wet dirt.Impacts and the equivalent of static interactions, or else.
They exist, that's what matters.
Honestly, I don't trust anything Wong has on his page. Even if he’s quoting another source there’s not telling just what details have been altered. On the other hand - I do trust both Squish and DF, who have absolutely no incentive to skew the formulas.And so we should ignore the source from 1994 used by Wong is clearly referenced, or the other source, from the Tsunami survey publications, giving similar numbers in fact, when published within the context of near Earth object deflections.
When you said 50 megatons would more likely be 50 kilotons. If I misinterpreted that bit, then ok, that's that.Where did I say this?
You want an explanation for the glow? I'm not going to give you one - and you know why? Because we don't know. Speculating on things we can't know is pointless. I can however show that it's not a shield, and did so earlier.Torpedoes glow like in all Trek. I'm all ears out for your explanation. I gave you mine.
Not necessarily. A shielded torpedo would be more complex to create, since it's much smaller then a ship. Whether they've managed to miniaturize shield-tech to that point in the TOS era is not something I'm able to comment on.Oh but you know the reply you should have given me. By your own logic, if torpedoes don't have shields when ships don't, then if ships have shields (since a good while by the time of TOS), torpedoes do.