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On Feb 6, 5:03*am, Pat Flannery wrote:
Martha Adams wrote: I think the above argument is right and wrong, depending upon how you look at it. *The only point I'd make against it, is that when the writer says "physics," I'd advise him to rephrase that to "today's physics." I think also, it's not the purpose of science fiction to "predict" the future. *Its purpose is to write a good story and sell it. *Along the way, depending upon the author, the topic, and the science involved, the story includes more or less science more or less stretched. *If it turns out years or decades later, that something the writer guessed (see Brunner, Shockwave Rider or Doctorow, Little Brother) is very relevant to something going on, the writer may get credit for "predicting" the future. *But life and the socioeconomics and technologies we live it in are so large and various, some of this science fiction writing shares a lot with standing inside a barn with the door closed, and firing off agun. *In which case you somehow, hit the barn. Of course there are other ways of destroying something than incinerating it. You could somehow shift it into another universe, reduce its temperature to absolute zero, or use the green blob thing from Pal's "War Of The Worlds" movie, which neutralized the electrical charge of the target object's mesons, causing it to disintegrate into subatomic debris. In the new WOTW movie, the weapon the war machines use appears to be a extremely high powered maser which superheat the water in anyone that it hits, causing them to blow completely apart in a violent steam explosion, while leaving their clothing largely intact, if shredded. In the original "The Day The Earth Stood Still" Gort's visorrayseemed to start some sort of a reaction going in the molecular structure of whatever it hit, somewhat like the meson neutralizer. Small objects pretty much just vanish, larger objects are partially vaporized, partially melted. The Star Trek phasers are the ones that are really hard to understand, as they appear to make objects completely vanish rather than burning them or breaking down their atomic structure. I imagine you could convert all the mass in a person's body into energy and leave no residue that way, but I'd hate to be within a hundred miles of the person the phaser hit when that happened, as the Romulan is going to be converted into a many mile wide crater. :-D Pat Yes, think of Leik Myrabo's laser propulsion experiments. Now imagine a laser powered nanobot that rides a laser beam to a target. Then, uses the laser's energy and the target itself to make copies of itself, until the target was consumed, then, the robots self destruct. That way, a very tiny bullet is needed - a 1 microgram nanobot - and in 10 doubling periods - say 0.1 seconds - that microgram becomes a milligram, and 0.2 seconds 1 milligram becomes 1 gram. in 0.3 seconds kilogram, 0.4 seconds 1 metric ton, 0.5 seconds kiloton in 1.1123 seconds - 5.2e+24 kg - the mass of the Earth. A quick comparison of the energy it takes to vaporize steel for example, or cut it up into tiny pieces with laser energy should convinece you of the gains obtained using laser powered nanobots rather than lasers alone. A few 50 MT Tsar Bomba's cpmverted tp ;aser emergu powering a self replicating nanobot population would decimate the Earth - with this technique, whereas the bombs by themselves would do little damage on anything beyond a local scale otherwise. |
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