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What, no planet kablooey?

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Re: What, no planet kablooey?
Post by cthia   » Mon Jan 11, 2016 11:10 pm

cthia
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noblehunter wrote:
Theemile wrote:
I remember an interview with Ronald Moore (BSG/STNG) and he mentioned parts of scripts where some writers had written something to the effect "He <teched> the <tech>" where what was said really didn't matter cause they were making the whole thing up, and "sciency" words could be filled in later to make the scene make sense -ish.

So in Star Trek, the science is definitely a distant second to the plot.

I recall hearing somewhere (so of dubious provenance) that if the actors then ad-libbed the technobabble, they get tiny royalties for the reruns because they partially "wrote" the line. It sounds even more dubious when I write it.

As for the red matter in the core, it clearly needs to be subject to a certain amount of pressure (and/or heat) before it turns into a black hole. Or leaving it on the surface risks unexpected gravitational effects that would fling it into space before the planet is destroyed.

Any sufficiently vague technobabble can be fan-wanked into reasonableness.

I think the problem loosely mimics the initially unsolvable problem of the Manhattan Project. The scientists couldn't solve the problem of the artificial mini explosion inside to create a perfectly symmetrical explosion whereby the correct mix would be obtained fast enough.


If this was a similar problem, the uniform pressure would crush the payload equally to achieve the desired reaction.

My guess anyways.

I don't suppose that duct tape was used to solve a problem on this one as well -- as the first A-bomb. :lol:

Son, your mother says I have to hang you. Personally I don't think this is a capital offense. But if I don't hang you, she's gonna hang me and frankly, I'm not the one in trouble. —cthia's father. Incident in ? Axiom of Common Sense
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Re: What, no planet kablooey?
Post by Louis R   » Wed Jan 13, 2016 2:37 pm

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There you go with the inaccurate terminology again.

What, precisely, do you mean by total annihilation? And how are you using "neighboring"?

Broadly speaking, you'd get something in the range from "didn't there used to be a star there?" to "bother! pass the sunscreen, please."

Keep it up long enough, and after you've disappeared the first couple of billion nearest neighbours you start to notice some minor dynamical effects. Of course, people would be getting kind of curious by then, and might wander over to ask just what you're up to.


cthia wrote:
On a non-fiction note, I wonder what unforeseen effects on a neighboring solar system would be set in motion from the total annihilation of it's neighbor -- and on and on in a domino effect of solar systems.

Should give a modeler something to play with for certain.
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Re: What, no planet kablooey?
Post by cthia   » Wed Jan 13, 2016 3:32 pm

cthia
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Louis R wrote:There you go with the inaccurate terminology again.

What, precisely, do you mean by total annihilation? And how are you using "neighboring"?

Broadly speaking, you'd get something in the range from "didn't there used to be a star there?" to "bother! pass the sunscreen, please."

Keep it up long enough, and after you've disappeared the first couple of billion nearest neighbours you start to notice some minor dynamical effects. Of course, people would be getting kind of curious by then, and might wander over to ask just what you're up to.


cthia wrote:
On a non-fiction note, I wonder what unforeseen effects on a neighboring solar system would be set in motion from the total annihilation of it's neighbor -- and on and on in a domino effect of solar systems.

Should give a modeler something to play with for certain.


*RIF -- at least keep up with the thread before you attack.

Recent research has yielded that solar winds of opposing solar systems are in a battle to the death. The region between these neighboring solar systems trap particles. Most of which has recently been determined to be hydrogen -- huge bands of hydrogen deposits. (Natural gas stations for Honorverse ships to top off their tanks.)

*Total annihilation of solar systems advances the premise of certain Sci-Fy tech in this thread. So I don't know where you're going with that. And in running with that tech as a gedanken, total annihilation of a solar system -- its sun and the planets that orbit it -- and along with it, the significant change of its influence on its neighboring system, what effect might it have?

Also, total annihilation means that the destruction of the sun and planets is beyond the ability of any remains to accrete. There are no remains.

I went through this already. Perhaps we need a sticky note of the definition of...


an·ni·hi·late

VERB
1.destroy utterly; obliterate


You should also keep abreast of the latest research in cosmology. It seems the idea that two solar systems can neighbor each other is tripping you up. The long arm of the law (gravitational law) has this MO.

Son, your mother says I have to hang you. Personally I don't think this is a capital offense. But if I don't hang you, she's gonna hang me and frankly, I'm not the one in trouble. —cthia's father. Incident in ? Axiom of Common Sense
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Re: What, no planet kablooey?
Post by Jonathan_S   » Wed Jan 13, 2016 3:57 pm

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cthia wrote:*Total annihilation of solar systems advances the premise of certain Sci-Fy tech in this thread. So I don't know where you're going with that. And in running with that tech as a gedanken, total annihilation of a solar system -- its sun and the planets that orbit it -- and along with it, the significant change of its influence on its neighboring system, what effect might it have?

Also, total annihilation means that the destruction of the sun and planets is beyond the ability of any remains to accrete. There are no remains.

I went through this already. Perhaps we need a sticky note of the definition of...


an·ni·hi·late

VERB
1.destroy utterly; obliterate


You should also keep abreast of the latest research in cosmology. It seems the idea that two solar systems can neighbor each other is tripping you up. The long arm of the law (gravitational law) has this MO.

Well under that definition, "beyond the ability of any remains to accrete", its inconceivable that it would ever happen. Even Supernovas leave the core of the star present.

But a 'Have Spacesuit Will Travel' style destruction with the solar system rotated into a different plane of existence or a 'Skylark DuQuesne' style solar system instantly transported to another galaxy will have relatively subtle affects on nearby systems.

I think getting the solar system sucked into a blackhole with the same mass as the solar system would have even less effect on nearby star systems. (Though if you were unlucky enough to have a rotational pole of the black hole pointed at your system you might eat some nasty gamma bursts)

But if the target system is destroyed by making its sun go supernova then the affect on nearby systems is extreme. A supernova can put out deadly levels of gamma radiation over a hundred light-years or so. Everyone dying from radiation exposure seems like an extreme impact; even if the planets themselves continue to serenely orbit their sun.
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Re: What, no planet kablooey?
Post by cthia   » Wed Jan 13, 2016 4:13 pm

cthia
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Jonathan_S wrote:
cthia wrote:*Total annihilation of solar systems advances the premise of certain Sci-Fy tech in this thread. So I don't know where you're going with that. And in running with that tech as a gedanken, total annihilation of a solar system -- its sun and the planets that orbit it -- and along with it, the significant change of its influence on its neighboring system, what effect might it have?

Also, total annihilation means that the destruction of the sun and planets is beyond the ability of any remains to accrete. There are no remains.

I went through this already. Perhaps we need a sticky note of the definition of...


an·ni·hi·late

VERB
1.destroy utterly; obliterate


You should also keep abreast of the latest research in cosmology. It seems the idea that two solar systems can neighbor each other is tripping you up. The long arm of the law (gravitational law) has this MO.

Well under that definition, "beyond the ability of any remains to accrete", its inconceivable that it would ever happen. Even Supernovas leave the core of the star present.

But a 'Have Spacesuit Will Travel' style destruction with the solar system rotated into a different plane of existence or a 'Skylark DuQuesne' style solar system instantly transported to another galaxy will have relatively subtle affects on nearby systems.

I think getting the solar system sucked into a blackhole with the same mass as the solar system would have even less effect on nearby star systems. (Though if you were unlucky enough to have a rotational pole of the black hole pointed at your system you might eat some nasty gamma bursts)

But if the target system is destroyed by making its sun go supernova then the affect on nearby systems is extreme. A supernova can put out deadly levels of gamma radiation over a hundred light-years or so. Everyone dying from radiation exposure seems like an extreme impact; even if the planets themselves continue to serenely orbit their sun.

Come on guys. We're talking hypothetical here -- under the premise of this thread's initial post that gives evidence of some Sci-Fy worlds where there has been the destruction of several entire solar systems. Superman accomplished it with a sneeze. You guys are taking shots at the messenger. I ain't claiming I got no handwavium. :lol:

It is established that solar systems are jockeying for position and power between each other. The resulting effect I question is not of the effect it may have on the denizens of a neighboring system, but on the system itself. Which can now spread out lacking the influence of the original tug of war.

Son, your mother says I have to hang you. Personally I don't think this is a capital offense. But if I don't hang you, she's gonna hang me and frankly, I'm not the one in trouble. —cthia's father. Incident in ? Axiom of Common Sense
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Re: What, no planet kablooey?
Post by Louis R   » Fri Jan 15, 2016 1:56 pm

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Your ignorance is showing here.

Not just ignorance of - actually, to be fair, limited acquaintance with - the subject under discussion, but your ignorance of the backgrounds, training, professions and hobbies of those you are conducting discussions with.

As it happens, I just finished reading a paper [http://arxiv.org/pdf/1512.01164.pdf] reporting the results of a new code - called SPICE - that models the interaction of stellar winds and the surrounding medium. The paper studies models in the specific context of Type Ia SNe, but the models are broadly applicable and in fact are being used to study influences on things such as galactic evolution. Extrapolating a bit from what was presented, while the grand clash of stellar systems you so eloquently present _can_ happen, it is restricted to the very small percentage of stars in luminosity classes I-III, plus the handful of even more extreme objects like WR stars and LBVs. These are the only stars with the potential to produce winds dense enough to affect their environments over interstellar distances - and some of them can indeed have a reach of >100ly - but whether they actually do so depends on a lot of factors, including age, mass, composition and evolutionary stage. And, of course, precisely what the environment is in the first place. High-mass stars can actually produce smaller effects than you would expect, because they evolve so fast that they are effectively stuck inside their birth environments, which are pretty much by definition high-density, and they move through the dense-wind phases fast enough that the wind can't travel very far before it starts decelerating. Class V stars, even massive ones, produce low-density winds that simply don't dominate the environment over long distances. For ~1-3Msol, modeling and direct observation [Voyager] show a reach of 70-95au; an O3V star might have a wind extending ~2-300au [again, this is a question of phase length rather than potential power - they simply don't spend enough time on the main sequence for it to matter] while the distances for <<1Msol are much less than 70au. IOW, 2 or more MS stars will encounter a colliding-wind scenario only within the confines of a multi-star system. Where annihilating one of them will have immediate and drastic dynamical effects on the system [setting aside the direct effects; see below].

So, since the vast majority of stars in the universe are not going to generate significant effects on each other at typical stellar separations, I think it's safe to ignore them. Let's look at what actually happens if you do get a clash of titans. We'll look at a pair of roughly identical RGB stars, since I happen to have some useful numbers. [HB & AGB stars have different structures, and therefore somewhat different winds] For other combinations, the following has to be scaled up or down or sideways, as appropriate. Assume that they are towards the upper end of their class, so that isolated they would dominate a region 25-30ly across, and that they are separated by 15ly. For the particular, rather arbitrary, scenario I just pick, the contact discontinuities will interact over a region several ly in diameter. Making a conservative estimate, since I can't solve the relevant model here, the density of the medium in that region will be doubled, raising it to a whopping 1.4/cubic centimeter. Uh, that's in units of particles, BTW, not mass. Centre of the zone will be 7.5ly from each star, and the edges ~11.5ly. Take one of those stars away, and no one in the other system would even notice the difference. Well, aside from the second-brightest star in their sky vanishing, of course. A couple of hundred thousand years later there ought to be a change in the local 21cm radio flux, and probably far-infrared emission. Doubt if there will be any other detectable changes.

Even restricting consideration to the RGB, the range at which you can get measurable effects could vary from 2ly to 60ly depending on the specific characteristics of each star. If you consider all possible combinations, the range goes from ~40au to ~150ly. Perhaps you now have an inkling of why I was wondering how, exactly, we should understand "neighbour".

As for annihilation, in physics the term does have a rather narrow meaning: the interaction of a particle with its anti-particle, which neither of them survives. So to me the "total annihilation" of a star requires colliding it with enough antimatter that every electron, neutron and proton in the star annihilates. The result of doing that in a binary system is going to be, to put it mildly, extreme. Do it 150ly away, and most people will be looking for extra sunscreen, although that does depend on how and, especially, how fast you carry out the operation. Nothing involving the mere mechanical disruption of a star is going to be as drastic, although the effects could be far more exciting visually. Simply disappearing it will net you a "that's odd! where did 163 Puppis go? it was right here 3 years ago."

Since the effects in neighbouring systems thus depend not only on where they are but on what is being done to the disappearing star and how efficiently the technique is applied, a certain degree of precision is, at the very least, going to be of great assistance in formulating a response.


cthia wrote:
Louis R wrote:There you go with the inaccurate terminology again.

What, precisely, do you mean by total annihilation? And how are you using "neighboring"?

Broadly speaking, you'd get something in the range from "didn't there used to be a star there?" to "bother! pass the sunscreen, please."

Keep it up long enough, and after you've disappeared the first couple of billion nearest neighbours you start to notice some minor dynamical effects. Of course, people would be getting kind of curious by then, and might wander over to ask just what you're up to.



*RIF -- at least keep up with the thread before you attack.

Recent research has yielded that solar winds of opposing solar systems are in a battle to the death. The region between these neighboring solar systems trap particles. Most of which has recently been determined to be hydrogen -- huge bands of hydrogen deposits. (Natural gas stations for Honorverse ships to top off their tanks.)

*Total annihilation of solar systems advances the premise of certain Sci-Fy tech in this thread. So I don't know where you're going with that. And in running with that tech as a gedanken, total annihilation of a solar system -- its sun and the planets that orbit it -- and along with it, the significant change of its influence on its neighboring system, what effect might it have?

Also, total annihilation means that the destruction of the sun and planets is beyond the ability of any remains to accrete. There are no remains.

I went through this already. Perhaps we need a sticky note of the definition of...


an·ni·hi·late

VERB
1.destroy utterly; obliterate


You should also keep abreast of the latest research in cosmology. It seems the idea that two solar systems can neighbor each other is tripping you up. The long arm of the law (gravitational law) has this MO.
Top
Re: What, no planet kablooey?
Post by cthia   » Fri Jan 15, 2016 4:07 pm

cthia
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Posts: 14951
Joined: Thu Jan 23, 2014 1:10 pm

Louis R wrote:Your ignorance is showing here.

Not just ignorance of - actually, to be fair, limited acquaintance with - the subject under discussion, but your ignorance of the backgrounds, training, professions and hobbies of those you are conducting discussions with.

As it happens, I just finished reading a paper [http://arxiv.org/pdf/1512.01164.pdf] reporting the results of a new code - called SPICE - that models the interaction of stellar winds and the surrounding medium. The paper studies models in the specific context of Type Ia SNe, but the models are broadly applicable and in fact are being used to study influences on things such as galactic evolution. Extrapolating a bit from what was presented, while the grand clash of stellar systems you so eloquently present _can_ happen, it is restricted to the very small percentage of stars in luminosity classes I-III, plus the handful of even more extreme objects like WR stars and LBVs. These are the only stars with the potential to produce winds dense enough to affect their environments over interstellar distances - and some of them can indeed have a reach of >100ly - but whether they actually do so depends on a lot of factors, including age, mass, composition and evolutionary stage. And, of course, precisely what the environment is in the first place. High-mass stars can actually produce smaller effects than you would expect, because they evolve so fast that they are effectively stuck inside their birth environments, which are pretty much by definition high-density, and they move through the dense-wind phases fast enough that the wind can't travel very far before it starts decelerating. Class V stars, even massive ones, produce low-density winds that simply don't dominate the environment over long distances. For ~1-3Msol, modeling and direct observation [Voyager] show a reach of 70-95au; an O3V star might have a wind extending ~2-300au [again, this is a question of phase length rather than potential power - they simply don't spend enough time on the main sequence for it to matter] while the distances for <<1Msol are much less than 70au. IOW, 2 or more MS stars will encounter a colliding-wind scenario only within the confines of a multi-star system. Where annihilating one of them will have immediate and drastic dynamical effects on the system [setting aside the direct effects; see below].

So, since the vast majority of stars in the universe are not going to generate significant effects on each other at typical stellar separations, I think it's safe to ignore them. Let's look at what actually happens if you do get a clash of titans. We'll look at a pair of roughly identical RGB stars, since I happen to have some useful numbers. [HB & AGB stars have different structures, and therefore somewhat different winds] For other combinations, the following has to be scaled up or down or sideways, as appropriate. Assume that they are towards the upper end of their class, so that isolated they would dominate a region 25-30ly across, and that they are separated by 15ly. For the particular, rather arbitrary, scenario I just pick, the contact discontinuities will interact over a region several ly in diameter. Making a conservative estimate, since I can't solve the relevant model here, the density of the medium in that region will be doubled, raising it to a whopping 1.4/cubic centimeter. Uh, that's in units of particles, BTW, not mass. Centre of the zone will be 7.5ly from each star, and the edges ~11.5ly. Take one of those stars away, and no one in the other system would even notice the difference. Well, aside from the second-brightest star in their sky vanishing, of course. A couple of hundred thousand years later there ought to be a change in the local 21cm radio flux, and probably far-infrared emission. Doubt if there will be any other detectable changes.

Even restricting consideration to the RGB, the range at which you can get measurable effects could vary from 2ly to 60ly depending on the specific characteristics of each star. If you consider all possible combinations, the range goes from ~40au to ~150ly. Perhaps you now have an inkling of why I was wondering how, exactly, we should understand "neighbour".

As for annihilation, in physics the term does have a rather narrow meaning: the interaction of a particle with its anti-particle, which neither of them survives. So to me the "total annihilation" of a star requires colliding it with enough antimatter that every electron, neutron and proton in the star annihilates. The result of doing that in a binary system is going to be, to put it mildly, extreme. Do it 150ly away, and most people will be looking for extra sunscreen, although that does depend on how and, especially, how fast you carry out the operation. Nothing involving the mere mechanical disruption of a star is going to be as drastic, although the effects could be far more exciting visually. Simply disappearing it will net you a "that's odd! where did 163 Puppis go? it was right here 3 years ago."

Since the effects in neighbouring systems thus depend not only on where they are but on what is being done to the disappearing star and how efficiently the technique is applied, a certain degree of precision is, at the very least, going to be of great assistance in formulating a response.



Louis R wrote:There you go with the inaccurate terminology again.

What, precisely, do you mean by total annihilation? And how are you using "neighboring"?

Broadly speaking, you'd get something in the range from "didn't there used to be a star there?" to "bother! pass the sunscreen, please."

Keep it up long enough, and after you've disappeared the first couple of billion nearest neighbours you start to notice some minor dynamical effects. Of course, people would be getting kind of curious by then, and might wander over to ask just what you're up to.




*RIF -- at least keep up with the thread before you attack.

Recent research has yielded that solar winds of opposing solar systems are in a battle to the death. The region between these neighboring solar systems trap particles. Most of which has recently been determined to be hydrogen -- huge bands of hydrogen deposits. (Natural gas stations for Honorverse ships to top off their tanks.)

*Total annihilation of solar systems advances the premise of certain Sci-Fy tech in this thread. So I don't know where you're going with that. And in running with that tech as a gedanken, total annihilation of a solar system -- its sun and the planets that orbit it -- and along with it, the significant change of its influence on its neighboring system, what effect might it have?

Also, total annihilation means that the destruction of the sun and planets is beyond the ability of any remains to accrete. There are no remains.

I went through this already. Perhaps we need a sticky note of the definition of...


an·ni·hi·late

VERB
1.destroy utterly; obliterate


You should also keep abreast of the latest research in cosmology. It seems the idea that two solar systems can neighbor each other is tripping you up. The long arm of the law (gravitational law) has this MO.

Why, oh why, is human DNA the most presumptuous strain in the galaxy?

And you may want to check out the underlying algorithms of SPICE if you really believe its "new."

Son, your mother says I have to hang you. Personally I don't think this is a capital offense. But if I don't hang you, she's gonna hang me and frankly, I'm not the one in trouble. —cthia's father. Incident in ? Axiom of Common Sense
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Re: What, no planet kablooey?
Post by Rincewind   » Sun May 15, 2016 8:35 pm

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Posts: 277
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I am surprised none of you have mentioned the ultimate weapon ever devised; the Reality Bomb as developed by Davros in Doctor Who, Season 4, Journey's End. Powered by 27 stolen planets & using a handy spatial rift it could destroy ALL of Reality... in every universe & plane of existence!

Now if that isn't the ultimate weapon I don't know what is.
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Re: What, no planet kablooey?
Post by darrell   » Sun May 15, 2016 9:14 pm

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Posts: 1390
Joined: Thu Jan 26, 2012 3:57 am

Rincewind wrote:I am surprised none of you have mentioned the ultimate weapon ever devised; the Reality Bomb as developed by Davros in Doctor Who, Season 4, Journey's End. Powered by 27 stolen planets & using a handy spatial rift it could destroy ALL of Reality... in every universe & plane of existence!

Now if that isn't the ultimate weapon I don't know what is.


and even more powerful, the illudium Q36 explosive space modulator:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Z40AsPaktzw
<><><><><><><><><><><><>
Logic: an organized way to go wrong, with confidence.
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Re: What, no planet kablooey?
Post by Kytheros   » Tue May 17, 2016 4:29 am

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Posts: 1407
Joined: Thu Dec 29, 2011 11:34 pm

Planet sterilization/killing.

Star Wars has/had (pre-Disney wipe of EU) Base Delta Zero - any Star Destroyer/equivalent warship could sterilize a planet and destroy any natural resources, although a BDZ order would usually employ multiple ships to speed things up.


Star Trek TOS - General Order Twenty Four, IIRC - the directive to destroy a world, although I think it's really more just the surface and outer layers, rather than the entire thing.
ST DS9 - the Cardassians and Romulans cooperated at one point in an attempt to destroy what they believed was the Founder's homeworld.


Warhammer 40k has the various forms of Exterminatus - they range from planetary sterilization to outright destruction. Also, Abbaddon's Planet Killer, I believe there are others. Tyranids will leave a planet dead and stripped of almost all useable matter when they've fed upon it.




Evan Currie's Odyssey One series has the Drasin - they'll eat a planet and convert it into soldier drones and let them die in the vacuum of space. There's also several Dyson constructs extant or mentioned as having been destroyed by the Drasin. Higher end ships utilize planetary masses in a singularity for a power source.
Evan Currie's On Silver Wings series has the Ross'El - they have an insane weapon - they weaponize gravity and can blow up anything from a ship to a planet in a matter of seconds. They're crazy bastards - they blew up an entire planet in order to stop two enemy (aka human) ships from being able to continue running away. They also blew up planets fairly regularly in their war with the Commonwealth - and the founding race of the Commonwealth retaliated by burning Ross worlds themselves. Also, during that war several major Ross star systems were turned into point singularities. The Ross are now part of the Commonwealth in a serious case of "keep your enemies closer".
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