- Joined
- Jul 30, 2017
Yes but S2 had measure of a man and Q who.For my money, Shades of Grey (Season 2 Finale, shitty clip show) is worse than any episode in Season 1.
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Yes but S2 had measure of a man and Q who.For my money, Shades of Grey (Season 2 Finale, shitty clip show) is worse than any episode in Season 1.
What? you're telling me you don't like seeing Tasha fight some Abobo chick on a jungle jim?Season 2 had a few solid episodes; it was getting better. I found literally every single episode from season 1 to be an absolute chore to get through.
If it's not mud, the fight's a dud.What? you're telling me you don't like seeing Tasha fight some Abobo chick on a jungle jim?
Fair points. Higher highs, lower lows and all that.Yes but S2 had measure of a man and Q who.
No, that's the one with their first encounter with the Borg.Q Who was when Q gave Riker powers, right?
The conventional explosives inside a thermonuclear warhead are what trigger the fission, which then is hot enough to trigger the fusion. I assume phasers are hot enough that they just skipped the conventoinal explosive part and straight up triggered the fission process.
Possibly even the fusion part, phasers are ridiculously powerful in some of their appearances. Maybe a nuclear nerd could correct me on this, but I figure a weapon than can blow continents off a planet can easily trip a nuclear device.
So many times this thread makes me wish we had aGenerally speaking, a weapon fired at an atomic bomb would break it without causing a nuclear explosion of any type, but we certainly see one happen in this episode.
A fission bomb is an encapsulated, fully-automated forge that uses explosives to weld several subcritical masses of metal into a single, spherical, supercritical mass. This all has to take place so quickly that the energy being released doesn't blow the sphere apart prematurely (a fizzle). It's an incredibly precise bit of engineering. If the conventional charges were detonated by an outside force, it's unlikely the explosion would be optimal, but I agree, you could possibly get a fizzle, especially if the weapon is a simple (as nuclear weapons go) gun type like the U-235 "Little Boy" or Plutonium "Thin Man." "Thin Man" was not actually built in WWII because of problems with its length, but it's a workable design.
If phasers incorporate fast neutrons, it is possible they would induce a local criticality in the nuclear fuel and again, cause a fizzle. This is also the case is the weapon is a fission-fusion-fission device basically encased in plutonium.
I'm dubious phasers would induce a fusion reaction, since that requires encapsulation in a layer that reflects x-rays and I'd expect the phaser fire to tear that up to the point it wouldn't work long before a fusion reaction would start. Still, it might be possible.
It could easily have enough energy to trigger a nuke, but the problem is that nukes are incredibly complicated devices. An attack from outside is much more likely to break it instead of setting it off.
Still, IIRC Enterprise was 150m from the charge when it went off. It's not too implausible it could survive a small fizzly hiccup at that range.
You know what would cure you of that attitude? Some VAHK-SEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEN!If it's not mud, the fight's a dud.
I tend to useSo many times this thread makes me wish we had a
NEEEEEERRRRRDDD!
rating.
Though it would have to count as both positive and negative. That was very informative (always love the doomsday weapons), but nerdy.
Ten out ten robots on the board agree it is positive.I tend to useas both a positive and negative rating. I'm not sure which it actually is though.
He will always be Mr House to me.Sucks the guy who played Odo died last year, lung cancer. I always remember him as the minister from The Patriot too.
You say that as though it were a controversial opinion.DS9 would never have made it as a series if it weren't for Odo and Quark.
There. I said, I'd say it again.
Garak helped a lot too.You say that as though it were a controversial opinion.
You needed the whole horse and caboodle to make DS9 work and they had it all. I can't imagine the series without any one of the characters except maybe Jake, but he still gets his great episodes and works towards developing Sisko's character.DS9 would never have made it as a series if it weren't for Odo and Quark.
There. I said, I'd say it again.
DS9 would never have made it as a series if it weren't for Odo and Quark.
You needed the whole horse and caboodle to make DS9 work and they had it all. I can't imagine the series without any one of the characters except maybe Jake, but he still gets his great episodes and works towards developing Sisko's character.
Yeah you'd think that, then you realize you'd lose "The Visitor" and realize, nope, nobody could be spared.You needed the whole horse and caboodle to make DS9 work and they had it all. I can't imagine the series without any one of the characters except maybe Jake, but he still gets his great episodes and works towards developing Sisko's character.