Showing posts with label star wars. Show all posts
Showing posts with label star wars. Show all posts

Thursday, January 19, 2012

Science: Could a ‘Death Star’ Really Destroy a Planet?


Could a ‘Death Star’ Really Destroy a Planet?
A paper by David Boulderston (University of Leicester) sets out to answer that very question by estimating how much energy the Death Star would need in order to destroy a planet with its superlaser.

Boulderston assumed that the planet is a solid body of uniform density – essentially ignoring the complex interior of planets, due to lack of information on Alderaan itself. Using the idealized sphere model based on Earth’s mass and diameter, it was possible to determine the gravitational binding energy of Alderaan, using a simple equation of:
U  
=    3GMp2

5Rp
Where G is the Gravitational Constant (6.673×10-11), Mp is planet mass, and Rp is the planet’s radius. Using Earth’s mass and radius, the required energy comes out to 2.25×1032 Joules. Using Jupiter’s data, the energy required goes up to 2×1036 Joules.

According to Star Wars lore, the Death Star is powered by a ‘hypermatter’ reactor, possessing the energy output of several main-sequence stars. Given that the power output of our Sun is about 3×1026 Joules per second, it’s a reasonable assumption the Death Star’s reactor could power the superlaser.

Boulderstone’s conclusion is that the Death Star could indeed destroy Earth-like planets, given its main power source. While the Death Star could destroy an Earth-sized planet, a Jupiter-sized planet would be a tough challenge, requiring all power from essential systems and life support, which is not necessarily possible.

Source: Universe Today

Monday, May 30, 2011

Daily Links: May 30, 2011


The Doctor Who theme, Adam Savage of Mythbusters, and tesla coils! (SLYT) ... just a part of this weekend's S.F. Bay Area Maker Faire.

Ever wonder what it'd be like to be carried around in a lion's mouth? Now through the wonders of technology (and a camera stealing big cat) you can experience it for yourself!

Hobbyists unite! How one Google Books user built a vintage automobile

Microsoft Mathematics is a free Computer Algebra System (CAS) available from Microsoft. A CAS is a program that can solve purely symbolic mathematical equations. For example, the program can tell you that the derivative of 6x^2 + 12x is 12x + 12. The program has functions for calculus, statistics, linear algebra, and graphing. One interesting feature of the program is that in some cases it can show and describe the intermediate steps involved in solving an equation. Here’s a 16 page tutorial (in MS Word docx format) showing how to use the program. The program can be downloaded from the Microsoft download page. Thirty-two and sixty-four bit versions are available. The program only works on XP/Vista/Windows 7.

Peter Thiel, co-founded PayPal and an early investor in Facebook, is granting $100,000 fellowships to not go to college, at least for a while. "We decided about 5 or 6 months ago to start up a program to try to identify 20 talented entrepreneurs, and give them a two year stipend to drop out of school, and to pursue their life's passions and see where that would go." The 20 Under 20 became 24 young people, the first group that the Thiel Foundation might save from the higher education bubble

The Secret Life of Storage Units in Honolulu: They may look like static warehouses on the outside but inside, Honolulu's self-storage units are bustling with hidden lives.

Friday, May 13, 2011

Daily Links: May 13, 2011



10 Cool Sites that Monitor Space

10 Enduring Myths About the U.S. Space Program


33 Things To Make Your Office Fun and Inspiring Again

Convert text to Morse code and visa versa

Enter your location and destination into the Google Earth Driving Simulator, and take a virtual trip to anywhere!

"A few years from now, an hour with a good plumber- if you can find one- is going to cost more than an hour with a good psychiatrist. At which point we'll all be in need of both." Mike Rowe addresses the Senate Committee on Commerce, Science and Transportation about the rapid decline in the trade labor force.  


Why a mobile phone ring may make bees buzz off: Insects infuriated by handset signals Signals from mobile phones could be partly to blame for the mysterious deaths of honeybees, new research shows. In the first experiment of its kind, a bee expert placed a mobile phone underneath a hive and then carefully monitored the reaction of the workers. Download the full report here: Mobile phone-induced honeybee worker piping.