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July 13th, 2002, 08:46 PM
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National Security Advisor
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Re: Population in SEIV
No... moving across a black hole obviously does not represent surviving the event horizon - it just means flying dangerously near, without entering. It's an abstract representation of 3D space, momentum, etc.
PvK
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July 13th, 2002, 10:31 PM
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Re: Population in SEIV
Which is why I said same sector and not *through* it.
Phoenix-D
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July 13th, 2002, 11:55 PM
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Re: Population in SEIV
Heh... actually, in space where there isn't as much material to transmit a shockwave it's not that inconceivable to survive a nuclear weapon as long as it's not a 'direct' hit -- detonation in actual contact with the ship.
And remember, scale is everything. What's the size of the warhead? Isn't it easier to load lots of small warheads (a few hundred kilotons?) on smaller missiles than to put the very biggest bomb you can make (50 megatons? 100 megatons?) on larger missiles? It's the usual trade-off: Smaller warheads are much more survivable individually but easier to get a hit with because you can launch more. Larger warheads might wipe out the target completely but with fewer of them available they can be more easily countered various measures.
There was a project in the late 1950s to build a space ship powered by nuclear bombs. Yes, bombs would be dropped out the back and a 'pusher plate' on the underside of the craft with enormous shock absorbers would take the bLast. It was called the Orion Project. Do a Google search for it and you'll find plenty of resources. It's had some recent attemtion due to the son of Freeman Dyson (who was a major contributor) writing a book about it.
[ July 13, 2002, 23:18: Message edited by: Baron Munchausen ]
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July 14th, 2002, 01:58 AM
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National Security Advisor
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Re: Population in SEIV
I guess my point is that the game values do not reflect the real-universe differences between weapons, and clearly we all have very different imaginations of what the same things represent.
However, I would say that if one considers that components like Bridge and Life Support can absorb 10 damage points each, that 60 points for a thermonuclear warhead hit seems at least "a bit" light (some would say incredibly so), since a typical smallest unarmored exploration ship can absorb typically 210 damage points.
As for passing through the black hole, again, it seems clear that the only way to enter the destructive zone of one in SE4 is to END the turn within the pull radius of the center, in which case the object takes damage. Moving through the same location on the 2D map and then moving to a safe distance is obviously (to me, anyway) not representing a move into the destructive area. To me, it seems like actually not a bad abstract representation, as long as one doesn't insist on interpreting it too literally and two-dimensionally.
PvK
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July 14th, 2002, 02:47 AM
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Second Lieutenant
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Re: Population in SEIV
Quote:
Originally posted by Baron Munchausen:
Heh... actually, in space where there isn't as much material to transmit a shockwave it's not that inconceivable to survive a nuclear weapon as long as it's not a 'direct' hit -- detonation in actual contact with the ship.
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Mass to transmit the shockwave is pure gravy. Most of the energy put out by an atomic device isn't directly kinetic in nature anyway ... radiant energy of various types. Also remember, the mass of the bomb itself will impact your craft at very high speeds. A near-miss in space will still push you around (hence hte Orion you mention below ). Potentially quite violently ...
Lackof proximity mainly produces a more-diffuse / less-intense dose of the radiant energies of the bLast. Otherwise, touching or 100m or 1km or whatever away, a bLast is a bLast.
Some randomness in damage would be VERY nice especially here, to reflect proximity of detonation; it's not like you can "shaped charge" effect a nuclear bLast, after all ...
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And remember, scale is everything. What's the size of the warhead? Isn't it easier to load lots of small warheads (a few hundred kilotons?) on smaller missiles than to put the very biggest bomb you can make (50 megatons? 100 megatons?) on larger missiles? It's the usual trade-off: Smaller warheads are much more survivable individually but easier to get a hit with because you can launch more. Larger warheads might wipe out the target completely but with fewer of them available they can be more easily countered various measures.
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With a lithium-hydride packed Hydrogen Bomb (of sufficient mass and size), the limit is much closer to a gigaton than a mere 100 megaton bLast. IIRC, the USA and/or USSR have test-detonated Hydrogen Bombs of up to 300 or 400 megatons ... as non-recently as 30 years ago, at the height of the cold war.
Quote:
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There was a project in the late 1950s to build a space ship powered by nuclear bombs. Yes, bombs would be dropped out the back and a 'pusher plate' on the underside of the craft with enormous shock absorbers would take the bLast. It was called the Orion Project. Do a Google search for it and you'll find plenty of resources. It's had some recent attemtion due to the son of Freeman Dyson (who was a major contributor) writing a book about it.
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Ah yes, the Orion ... one of my Favorites. The novel Footfall includes the actual (in the story ofc) construction, launch, and use of such a craft. Unfortunately, I'm suffering brainlock on the writer's name ATM ...
When piloting an Orion-drive space-craft launching from a planetary surface, just remember: if the first bomb is a dud, that's not a problem. If the SECOND bomb is a dud ... you have a definite problem. Mainly owing to the fact that the first one throws you a mile or so up, and if the second fails ... you fall. Heh.
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July 14th, 2002, 04:11 AM
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Re: Population in SEIV
When you are talking about hardened miltary targets, mass is essential for doing damage on anything but a direct hit. In an atmosphere the intense radiation heats up the stuff around it and causes the explosion. Thus the damage. Outside a certain radius even a nuclear warhead isn't going to do much damage in space. This would depend on the heat resistance of the skin of your ship, of course.
The Orion project actually included the 'propellant' -- stuff for the nuclear explosion to heat up -- with the bomb. It wasn't just a bald nuke dropped out of the craft. You can see the details as I said, by going to a search engine. So, it was not relying on just the energy.
I would really like to know where you get the information about any nuclear tests larger than 50 megatons. According to every official 'Nuclear Arms Testing' site I've ever visited the largest test ever was a Soviet nuke of 50 Mgtn which it was believed could be souped up to 100. Where on earth could anyone have tested anything larger?
Edit: The 'Tsar Bomb' was the largest nuclear weapon ever constructed or detonated. While only tested at 50 Megatons, it was intended to be a 100 megaton device. It was 'useless militarily' and was created purely for political purposes.
NB: Sakharov was the designer! (1961)
http://nuketesting.enviroweb.org/hew...ovwarhead.html
[ July 14, 2002, 03:40: Message edited by: Baron Munchausen ]
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July 17th, 2002, 07:24 PM
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Second Lieutenant
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Re: Population in SEIV
just out of curiosity why would something of 100 megatons be useless militarily? too big to fly in?
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