Home » Stars! 2.6/7 » The Bar » We're Not Afraid...
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Re: We're Not Afraid... |
Fri, 11 April 2003 03:08 |
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Do the maths (eeeep bad idea).
1 Zoidian x 121 light years per year = huge forces applied to the Zoidian body.
In other words launch them at warp 11 and they'll arrive embedded into the mass packet much like cars embed themselves into buildings if they hit the building at 121 miles per hour.
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Re: We're Not Afraid... |
Sat, 12 April 2003 05:19 |
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Well.....
Even if they DID survive such intense gravitational forcees, the vacuum of space, the intense radiation etc...
Hitting a big hard rock at 121 light years per year is a sufficient impact to kill... oh everyone or so.
So lets be honest now zoid... you're not going to launch your people in a mass packet... i mean... who'd clear up that mess?? Thats just mean and cruel making other pick up iddy biddy pieces of zoid impacted into rock over a wide area.
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Re: We're Not Afraid... |
Fri, 18 April 2003 13:43 |
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Steve1 | | Officer Cadet 2nd Year | Messages: 240
Registered: January 2003 Location: Australia | |
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noroM have developed special cushioning buffers that will not only land the Zoid colonists safely but will convert them to hard working slaves for our Germanium mines (yes we still offer manual labour to 1st generation aliens). Your children and your childrens children will however have the same rights as all other noroM citizens.
So please do develop the technology to packet your citizens our way - we shall welcome them with open mechanical receiving arms.
Regards - Steve
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Re: We're Not Afraid... |
Sat, 19 April 2003 23:56 |
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zoid | | Ensign | Messages: 348
Registered: December 2002 Location: Murray, KY - USA | |
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Steve1 wrote on Fri, 18 April 2003 10:43 | ....will convert them to hard working slaves for our Germanium mines....
| Judging by the fleets of OBRM mining ships orbiting several planets, I'd say the noroMs should have focused their technology on ways to make their germanium mines more productive. Or, is that where the Zoid miners come in? Our miners certainly could show those lazy morons a thing or two about mining. Of course, such hard labor has rendered 94% of our population infertile. I guess that's why those virulent noroMs have such an aversion to working the mines.
Quote: | Your children and your childrens children will however have the same rights as all other noroM citizens. So please do develop the technology to packet your citizens our way - we shall welcome them with open mechanical receiving arms.
| The LAST thing you need is more citizens! Jeez, the noroMs probably outnumber the rest of the world combined! No, we wanna packet them back to the more recessed Zoid colonies. They're...um, voters.
I'M NOT AN EXPERT AND I'M OFTEN PROVEN WRONG. TAKE THAT INTO CONSIDERATION WHEN YOU READ MY POSTS.
Math? Ummm, sure! I do FREESTYLE math.Report message to a moderator
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Re: We're Not Afraid... |
Fri, 02 May 2003 01:37 |
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BackBlast | | | Messages: 215
Registered: February 2003 Location: A Rock | |
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zoid wrote on Fri, 11 April 2003 23:44 |
freakyboy wrote on Fri, 11 April 2003 00:08 | 1 Zoidian x 121 light years per year = huge forces applied to the Zoidian body.
In other words launch them at warp 11 and they'll arrive embedded into the mass packet much like cars embed themselves into buildings if they hit the building at 121 miles per hour.
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Bah, Zoids are immune to gravity, temperature, and radiation - They're hardy souls alright; they can take just about anything. A bit of rapid deceleration like warp 11 to zero in .0000016 nanoseconds shouldn't upset them too much. Um, that is if my mathematical equasion is correct.
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121 ly per year = 121 x light speed = 36,274,887,418 m/s
given it travels half the distant the first year, I'll give you 1/2 year of acceleration.
.5 years = 15,778,462 s
acceleration = 36,274,887,418 m/s / 15,778,462 s = 2,300 m/s^2 (2 sig figures)
1.00 G is 9.8 m/s^2, your colonists would endure ~234 Gs for about 1/2 a year. The surface gravity of our sun is 28 Gs. Perhaps it could be approached by the surface gravity of a very dense white dwarf. It is nothing close to that of a neutron star though. During the very short journey into such an body as a neutron star, objects or gases would begin to approach the speed of light. If you could live there... I would be most impressed
To accelerate or decelerate from or to warp 11 in a small time frame could easily exceed the forces binding atoms together, making it quite impossible to survive with anything that looks remotely like what you started with.
BackBlast
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Re: We're Not Afraid... |
Fri, 02 May 2003 02:22 |
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zoid | | Ensign | Messages: 348
Registered: December 2002 Location: Murray, KY - USA | |
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BackBlast wrote on Thu, 01 May 2003 22:37 |
zoid wrote on Fri, 11 April 2003 23:44 |
freakyboy wrote on Fri, 11 April 2003 00:08 | 1 Zoidian x 121 light years per year = huge forces applied to the Zoidian body.
In other words launch them at warp 11 and they'll arrive embedded into the mass packet much like cars embed themselves into buildings if they hit the building at 121 miles per hour.
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Bah, Zoids are immune to gravity, temperature, and radiation - They're hardy souls alright; they can take just about anything. A bit of rapid deceleration like warp 11 to zero in .0000016 nanoseconds shouldn't upset them too much. Um, that is if my mathematical equasion is correct.
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121 ly per year = 121 x light speed = 36,274,887,418 m/s
given it travels half the distant the first year, I'll give you 1/2 year of acceleration.
.5 years = 15,778,462 s
acceleration = 36,274,887,418 m/s / 15,778,462 s = 2,300 m/s^2 (2 sig figures)
1.00 G is 9.8 m/s^2, your colonists would endure ~234 Gs for about 1/2 a year. The surface gravity of our sun is 28 Gs. Perhaps it could be approached by the surface gravity of a very dense white dwarf. It is nothing close to that of a neutron star though. During the very short journey into such an body as a neutron star, objects or gases would begin to approach the speed of light. If you could live there... I would be most impressed
To accelerate or decelerate from or to warp 11 in a small time frame could easily exceed the forces binding atoms together, making it quite impossible to survive with anything that looks remotely like what you started with.
BackBlast
| Wow! Lookit all them numbers and symbols and stuff! "If you can't dazzle 'em with brilliance, baffle 'em with BS." I'm not sure which category all this falls into, but I'm impressed anyways.
I'M NOT AN EXPERT AND I'M OFTEN PROVEN WRONG. TAKE THAT INTO CONSIDERATION WHEN YOU READ MY POSTS.
Math? Ummm, sure! I do FREESTYLE math.Report message to a moderator
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Re: We're Not Afraid... |
Fri, 02 May 2003 10:35 |
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BlueTurbit | | Lt. Commander
RIP BlueTurbit died Oct. 20, 2011 | Messages: 835
Registered: October 2002 Location: Heart of Texas | |
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Based upon our limited knowledge of ancient GST theory we have found gravity to be irrelevant with respect to speeds exceeding light. Forget gravity. Matter described in electromagnetical and gravitational fields makes it most difficult to travel at speeds exceeding light and therein lies your problem. How is it that you travel even at warp 10 without this primitive knowledge in the first place?
We have found that expanding spacetime is much better. The space vacuum is governed by an absolute time underlying the space-time continuum. Therefore no threat on causality by superluminal processes exists.
Our study of wormholes, tachyons and black holes has been the key to success. A simple wormhole whereas a shortcut is made by warping space (folding the paper) to connect two points that used to be separated. To achieve this you’ll need a ring of negative energy wrapped around the ship as the negative mass has negative inertia. Having travelled through many wormholes we know that speeds exceeding far beyond warp 10 are not only possible but historical. And our colonists have always arrived intact with no evidence of molecular splattering upon arrival. Although we have had a couple of arrivals that said they were looking forward to having lunch yesterday.
So forget gravity, gravity sucks. But then again there is the dark sucker theory which proves that dark is faster than light.
First, the basis of the Dark Sucker Theory is that electric bulbs suck dark. For example, take the Dark Sucker in the room you are in. There is much less dark right next to it than there is elsewhere. The larger the Dark Sucker, the greater its capacity to suck dark. Dark Suckers in a parking lot have a much greater capacity to suck dark than the ones in a room.
So with all things, Dark Suckers don't last forever. Once they are full of dark, they can no longer suck. This is proven by the dark spot on a full Dark Sucker.
A candle is a primitive Dark Sucker. A new candle has a white wick. You can see that after the first use, the wick turns black, representing all the dark that has been sucked into it. If you put a pencil next to the wick of an operating candle, it will turn black. This is because it got in the way of the dark flowing into the candle. One of the disadvantages of these primitive Dark Suckers is their limited range.
There are also portable Dark Suckers. In these, the bulbs can't handle all the dark by themselves and must be aided by a Dark Storage Unit. When the Dark Storage Unit is full, it must be either emptied or replaced before the portable Dark Sucker can operate again.
Dark has mass. When dark goes into a Dark Sucker, friction from the mass generates heat. Thus, it is not wise to touch an operating Dark Sucker. Candles present a special problem as the mass must travel into a solid wick instead of through clear glass. This generates a great amount of heat and therefore it's not wise to touch an operating candle.
Also, dark is heavier than light. If you were to swim just below the surface of the lake, you would see a lot of light. If you were to slowly swim deeper and deeper, you would notice it getting darker and darker. When you get really deep, you would be in total darkness. This is because the heavier dark sinks to the bottom of the lake and the lighter light floats at the top. The is why it is called light.
Finally, we must prove that dark is faster than light. If you were to stand in a lit room in front of a closed, dark closet, and slowly opened the closet door, you would see the light slowly enter the closet. But since dark is so fast, you would not be able to see the dark leave the closet.
Next time you see an electric bulb, remember that it is a Dark Sucker.
[Updated on: Fri, 02 May 2003 11:07]
BlueTurbit Country/RockReport message to a moderator
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Re: We're Not Afraid... |
Sat, 03 May 2003 06:45 |
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The "Rigors" of warp travel relates to the dementia felt by all races who travel at warp speeds. While travelling at warp for some god unknown reason all races get this unstoppable urge to watch daytime chat shows like Montel, Ricky and other such tripe.
Most races (with some training) can endure this torture for extended periods and as such they can survive such torment. The AR species is slightly weaker of mind and as such on occasion one will utter words like "you go gurl" and as such the other individuals on board have no choice but to shoot the unfortunate soul or they will poison the gene pool.
A similar situation arose in the late 20th century and continued into the 21st century on Earth. For some unknown reason though the people that fell victim to such "shows" were for some reason not shot on sight. As such humanity continued to produce poor quality children because this poison was spread into the gene pool. May God/Allah/Budda/(insert name of deity here) save us all.
On a secondary note... if light bulbs are dark suckers... are black holes dark blowers?
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Re: We're Not Afraid... |
Tue, 17 June 2003 23:02 |
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Hatterson | | | Messages: 121
Registered: May 2003 Location: NY, USA |
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freakyboy wrote on Sat, 03 May 2003 06:45 | On a secondary note... if light bulbs are dark suckers... are black holes dark blowers?
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Yes, they are. Actually when you think about it it makes a lot of sense. After all if the dark suckers are sucking so much dark, how come they never just suck all of the dark out of the universe. I mean, you have all of the stars sucking dark 24/7 and yet there never seems to be a shortage of it. The reason for this is what you said, black holes.
Now you may ask, why do these black holes blow dark and not some other substance like, say, cheese. Well the answer to this is very simple. Becuase black holes are so unique (as Steven Wright said "Black holes are where God divided by zero") they need to expel a unique substance. Dark is the only substance unique enough to qualify, sadly cheese is just too common.
Now as I look at the list of smilies a thought pops into my head. The dark sucker is labeled idea. This is because when your brain is filled with dark you are not able to think properly. Therefore you need a temporary dark sucker to help you think. Thus, the saying actually should not be "a light bulb just came on in my head" but rather should be "the dark was just sucked out of my head."
Now I could go on for hours explaining the mysteries of dark but many of the questions that I would be answering are best left to profesional thinkers (or at least the terminally insane) and besides my brain is starting to hurt for the dark sucker is almost finished.
[edit: Sorry for pulling up this old topic but I just couldn't resist.]
[Updated on: Tue, 17 June 2003 23:04]
"Don't be so humble - you are not that great. " - Golda Meir (1898-1978) to a visiting diplomatReport message to a moderator
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