Please explain how the first beam could not contain and/or deliver particle energy.Lucky wrote:Why ask: "Why should we assume that the first beam didn't contain particle energy"?Mr. Oragahn wrote: Particle energy is nothing fancy. It's just KE and PE, and eventually anything related to rest mass in quantum physics.
The fact that Worf mentions positrons and antiprotons in his first statement does not collide with the concept of particle energy.
There will be particle energy from those particles, no matter what, just as there will be from the shower of particles released by annihilation.
All is full of particle energy.
Worf gives the second measurement in particle energy, but not the first, and that is why it matters.
Why would Worf pointing out that they've been hit with x watt of particle energy the second time they're hit necessarily exclude that they also had to cope with particle energy. Particle energy is a logical result of annihilation.
No. Particle energy can mean a type of energy.The definition of Particle energy is the energy a single particle has. Any measurement given in particle energy would be for a single particle.Mr. Oragahn wrote: If you read the quote you provided, nowhere it says 400 GW per particle.
In this case, the energy of particles.
It does not have to only mean the energy of one particle.
It is a global statement.
And you don't rate the energy of a particle in watts.
Please acknowledge those points. It is necessary so you can see your mistake.
Which funnily is a point you completely dodged when I first pointed it out. Do you know how many particles you would begin to need in order to make the beam remotely opaque?We can't know how many particles were fired, but we know there were enough to be seen with the naked eye. Unless you want to argue they are abnormally large particles the total number of particles would be rather large. ^_^Mr. Oragahn wrote: And how do you know how many particles hit the shield?
Yes, suddenly you realize that your position means the E-D was hit with something in the region of 4 e32~34 W.
No. Hence why I said you misunderstood my point. I thought it was rather clear though, when I precisely meant that the wattage of the beam, and the energy of the antimatter particles upon annihilation, would be two different things, and only the second part, which is not quantified properly, would be dangerous.You are the one arguing that a 400GW DET weapon is powerful enough to bring down the Enterprise-D's shields, and melt the hullMr. Oragahn wrote: Where? I believe you didn't read my posts properly from the beginning.
0.095602294455067 Megaton is equal to 400 giga-joulse
Of course, this theory is also silly in a way because Worf, or the E-D's sensors, would be too mediocre as to fail to notify, then, the true firepower of what really hit them.
Quite the contrary, and the atmosphere is totally irrelevant, as it's not going to change anything of significance.When have we ever seen an asteroid like you describe in Star Trek? ^_^Mr. Oragahn wrote: I don't think the NX ever had that kind of firepower. Reed's statement, assuming it's taken literally, says a photonic torpedo will put a 3 km crater in an asteroid, which often are "glued" globes of rubble, sometimes loosely held by gravity, and that in space, which is a zero gravity environment.
It's completely different than trying to make a crater in the ground of a planet.
As I understand it the lack of an atmosphere means the bomb/missle/torpedo need to be more powerful to make the same sized craters.
Yeah but that's just not relevant to the point I made, which was a reply to your evocation of ENT yields and battles.Yes, and those superior civilizations aren't superior by the time of TOS, and I seem to recall a TNG episode where a TOS era Klingon ship was not powerful enough to be a threat to the E-D.Mr. Oragahn wrote: They're the weapons that's most used. Check most of ENT battles for that. Only few superior civilizations, like the Klingons at that time, had ships which could cope with phasers, and even a torpedo with shields at full.
Aside from a gamble on hyperbole? Show me a GO24 being conducted and you'll have something. A captain like Kirk who says his ship can do X in the middle of a tense moment, in order to make a point and win whatever kind of debate he was locked in, is hardly reliable.Canon is canon. Kirk clearly states what General Order 24 is, and his crew reads to carry it out. We have no reason to believe the order is anything but what it is portrayed as, or that they could not do it.
Was it Descent then? But I guess it's been addressed in this thread now.Seriously, I want to see the quote, and I want you to be more specific about what episodes you are talking about. "The Borg ship incident, not Relics" is kind of vague.Mr. Oragahn wrote: What are you trying with your Jedi tricks? Those don't work on me.
Quote, perhaps?If I'm not mixing up episode with Q in them it is the episode that has Data saying the warp is increasing it's output by something like 3 gigaton a second, and then the warp core explodes a few seconds later giving us an idea of the E-D's power generation capabilities..Mr. Oragahn wrote: Perhaps. Perhaps not. What's so special about Q Who?
Obviously. You've just acknowledged that there's an issue about "The Survivors". Going in circles isn't really helpful.If simply shooting a 400 GW anti-matter particle beam at shields would bring them down then all the trek powers would do, and shields would be nigh useless for combat.Mr. Oragahn wrote: You're wrong. My former posts in this thread were meant to explain why those 400 GW weren't the cause of the real damage, but the antimatter fired at the ship.
However, in my last two or three posts, I wondered if it could be possible to make ships with terawatt-range power production fit with the "facts" of Trek. Mind you, this hypothesis goes by the idea that the ship can stockpile "shield points" up in the petajoule range. See, we don't even need to get there. Even having shields charged to cope with hundreds of terajoules would laugh at the 400 GW beam so it doesn't matter, because even with this late hypothesis I'm exploring, I still need to explain the issue relative to the 400 GW threatening a ship which I believe could charge shields.
If 400 GW was enough to bring down shields easily then the NX-1 would have been a beast in combat.