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theltemes

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Everything posted by theltemes

  1. Re: All Books In Warehouse: APG, Both 6th Ed Yay! Just placed my pdf+book order for Vol 1/2, Basic and APG!
  2. Re: Reminiscing About Star Fleet Battles Yeah, the combination of Starmada and VBAM make for some really fun wargaming.
  3. Re: Reminiscing About Star Fleet Battles Pffftt... There is no other version than the Doomsday™ edition. I like my ship combat rules to barely fit into a 3" 3-ring binder.
  4. Re: Hard Science Help It's all relative, baby. The person moving near c experiences no sensation of time being different - he/she observes that the rest of the universe's time has sped up. Likewise, an observer of the really fast moving person would say that their time is moving at the "normal" rate, and that the person moving near c has almost no change in time. It still takes a person moving near c a little over a year to travel one light year to the outside observer, but to the person in the craft the journey is nearly instantaneous because of the relativistic length contraction of space.
  5. Re: Tac-nukes vs. Nuclear Warheads A sphere minimizes the surface area of the mass, resulting in decreased number of escaping neutrons, hence minimizing the critical mass needed. A classic problem in nuclear engineering - determining the required mass for criticality: Geometric Buckling = Material Buckling
  6. Re: Astrophysics question Traveling through a medium, the group velocity changes while the phase velocity remains at the speed of light in a vacuum.
  7. Re: Modelling Explosives : TNT I guess today is a good day for picking nits. I changed my post from STR 10 to 8 so you can sleep tonight.
  8. Re: Modelling Explosives : TNT As far as lifting mass goes, the FAA Human Factor Design Standard (HFDS) gives numbers for a 5th and 95th percentile lifting of weight to a height of 100cm. For males the values were 444.4 N and 931.0 N (average) and for females the values were 185.0 N and 443.0 N. If we assume the 50th percentile lies midway between the two extremes, the 100cm lifting strength for a STR 8 character is 687.7 N (male) or 314 N (female). Since the game mechanics don't differentiate between genders, let's go with the value of 687.7 N or 154.6 lb. So the work would be 688 N-m (70 kg-m) or 507 ft-lb. The 4184 J per gram of TNT is a defined unit. Although you found it on Wikipedia, it is indeed correct. The true destructive power of TNT is indeed its power (J/sec or Watts). TNT actually has a relatively low energy content per kilogram (4.184 MJ/kg). For comparison, the combustion of air-dried wood yields 15.5 MJ/kg, anthracite coal 31.4 MJ/kg, propane 50.3 MJ/kg. The advantage of TNT is that it doesn't need air to combust and the combustion rate is much higher.
  9. Re: Another advanced and weird material Preach it, Curufea!
  10. Re: Future Tech Links Coil guns (propelling an object through a solenoid) and a rail gun (propelling an object along a pair of conducting rails) are two drastically different technologies.
  11. Re: Future Tech Links Princeton Plasma Physics Lab fusion website.
  12. Re: Interplanetary colonies Does that estimate factor into account the capability to manufacture water and oxygen from the lunar regolith, or are they assuming that all consumables would have to be transported from Earth?
  13. Re: That's no moon, that's a space station! Proving once again that life indeed imitates art.
  14. Re: Fusion transmutation.
  15. Re: Fusion transmutation. Now I'm just a fusion power reactor engineer, so take what I say with a grain of salt Once you get out of the realm of these reactions: D-T D-D D-He3 He-3He3 p-B11 You are definitely in the realm of "magic tech" if you are thinking about generating elements using fusion that we can sustain with any conceivable technology based on real-world physics. Also, you would only generate very small amounts of matter on a scale of thermal waste that we know how to deal with. For example, a 3000MWth DT inertial confinement fusion reactor (the same output as a modern fission reactor) will use up 30mg of DT per second producing a bit less than 10mg per second He4. I mention inertial confinement here because a tokomak really won't work for nucleosynthesis - a major problem that we have now is how to get the fusion products out of the reactor while keeping the fuel inside (the products tend to poison the reaction in a tokomak plasma).
  16. Re: Fusion transmutation. Wouldn't be a whole lot easier to just collect the materials you wanted from the planets and asteroids in whatever star system you happen to be in?
  17. Re: Advanced energy sources: Some thought and pretty big numbers.
  18. Re: BSG Hero Update You may want to consider lightening the sidebar graphics. The dark gray graphic makes the text a little hard to read in the areas where they overlap.
  19. Re: Mars Colony by 2025? Reread my post about radiation conditions. You will need to live "underground" on Mars, but it only takes about 80cm of Martain regolith to protect you from SPE and GCR radiation. UV can be filtered pretty easily as well. The bigger environmental problem on both the Moon and Mars is actually dust, as others have posted. As far as economic concerns go, it is a lot cheaper to launch spacecraft from either the Moon or Mars, as compared to the Earth. Both planets have an abundant supply of fuel, once it is processed out of the soil. In addition, the Moon and other airless bodies in the solar system, as well as Jupiter and Saturn, have abundant supplies of Helium-3. This is the stuff that will be used in commercial-grade fusion reactors (don't laugh, we are running a D-He3 experimental reactor in the basement where I work right now). In the future, recovery of He3 will be a very profitable economic factor. In fact, one space shuttle's cargo hold worth of He3 would be worth about 40 billion dollars in today's money. For more information on the economic aspects of space, see the course notes from Resources from Space.
  20. Re: Question: Launching Small Craft Well, a mathematical way to guesstimate a launch rate: (N x 2L)/v = Launch Time N = number of craft that will fit through a hangar door simultaneously L = Length of said craft (allow another craft length for a safety buffer) v = the departure speed of the craft. So if you are using meters for craft length and m/s for a departure speed, this will tell you the number of seconds between launches.
  21. Re: Mars Colony by 2025? Just a FYI for those planning on running adventures on Mars. Many people fail to consider the radiological environment on Mars. It has a very thin atmosphere, which means that human visitors/inhabitants on Mars will be exposed to a variety of radiation sources. UV light will be a problem. Any habitats that have exposed windows will need to be UV protected, as will any people travelling on the surface in pressure suits. The UV radiation is significant enough that it would be advisable to have two different methods of UV protection for both the eyes and the skin. I would recommend UV coated helmets in addition to UV goggles. The UV radiation is intense enough that UV blocking sunscreen would not be sufficient. Martian workers would need UV absorbing materials in both their pressure suits as well as a second body glove, which is usually standard with a pressure suit (to regulate body temperature). Cosmic rays and solar particle events will need to be shielded against as well. Approximately one meter of martian regolith will be required to protect habitats and roving vehicles from GCR and SPE radiation. I have examined the radiation environment in three locations: Hellas Planatia, the Southern Highlands and Northern Lowlands. These locations were chosen as probable sites for an underground habitat. It turns out that for occupational radiation exposure (2.0 cSv/yr) that exterior crewed operations will be limited as follows: Hellas Planatia: 19 12-hour days per every 50 day mission cycle Southern Highlands: 8 12-hour days per every 50 day mission cycle Northern Lowlands: 14 12-hour days per every 50 day mission cycle So be prepared to have any martian inhabitants be spending a lot of time indoors.
  22. Re: Earth's core Yeah, that was pretty funny too. I know some guys who work on Sandia's Z-Pinch project. That thing is housed in a room the size of a hockey rink. The experiment has to sit for several hours before the radiation decays enough for it to be safe enough for anyone to enter the room after the shot goes off.
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