What kind of fusion do you think Star Wars has?

In summary, fusion power is mentioned a lot in Star Wars. Fusion power is mentioned a lot in Star Wars.
  • #36
DaveC426913 said:
But that's not the joke. The joke is "What's a falcon". (In the same vein as "What's fusion?")
Yep, got that, but the 'speed' of the Millennium Falcon is in there, and it highlights that George Lucas cared not one whit for science!
 
Physics news on Phys.org
  • #37
Melbourne Guy said:
Yep, got that, but the 'speed' of the Millennium Falcon is in there, and it highlights that George Lucas cared not one whit for science!
Agree. Although my 'suspension of disbelief' says that:
  1. We are seeing these stories translated into our language:
  • They have planets and suns and time-keeping. They have a counterpart in the SWU. So Whatever word(s) they have for 'a thousand orbits' - or whatever - is helpfully changed for us in the translation to 'Millennium'.
  • A 'falcon', on the other hand, is not something the SWU has at all. There can be no translation. At best, there could be an outright substitution.
It might be called the Millennium Mynock, but not the Millennium Falcon.
:biggrin:
 
  • #38
Maximum7 said:
Well I’m working on a project and exploring the science behind the scenes of Star Wars. The stuff that isn’t mentioned but exists and I was wondering what type of fusion fits the bill for them.
Hi @Maximum7, I was wondering if you've read up on George Lucas' thinking on his creative universe, it helps to frame how seriously to take things...and why there's a lot of irreverent responses on 'the science of Star Wars'. He was interviewed by Bill Moyers in 1999 for the release of The Phantom Menace and a couple of questions illustrate that even though George thought through many elements, even he was constrained by what he had crafted because he did not have the entire saga clear in his mind when he started:

GEORGE LUCAS: We were using a kind of technology which had to be completely worked out. How do these bubbles exist under there? Where do they come from? What do they use for energy? The whole culture has to be designed. What do they believe in? How do they operate? What are the economics of the culture. Most of it doesn’t appear in the movie, but you have to have thought it through, otherwise there’s — something always rings very untrue or phony about what it is that’s going on. And one of the things I struggle for is to create a kind of immaculate realism in a totally unreal and fantasy world. It’s a science that I can make up. But once I make up a rule, then I have to live with it.

BILL MOYERS: Such as? The world according to George.

GEORGE LUCAS: Well — I mean, one of the rules is that there’s sound in space.

(Excerpt from “Star Wars”)

GEORGE LUCAS: So there’s sound in space. I can’t suddenly have spaceships flying around without any sound anymore because I’ve already done it. I’ve established that as one of the rules of the — of the — of my galaxy and I have to live with that.
No amount of thinking is going to create a 'science' that allows sound in space, but nonetheless, it's there!
 
  • #39
Melbourne Guy said:
Hi @Maximum7, I was wondering if you've read up on George Lucas' thinking on his creative universe, it helps to frame how seriously to take things...and why there's a lot of irreverent responses on 'the science of Star Wars'. He was interviewed by Bill Moyers in 1999 for the release of The Phantom Menace and a couple of questions illustrate that even though George thought through many elements, even he was constrained by what he had crafted because he did not have the entire saga clear in his mind when he started:No amount of thinking is going to create a 'science' that allows sound in space, but nonetheless, it's there!
Thanks for the link! Yes they tried to explain sound in space with auditory sensors but the fine structure constant may be different in their galaxy.
 
  • #40
Maximum7 said:
Yes they tried to explain sound in space with auditory sensors but the fine structure constant may be different in their galaxy.
Really, the fine structure constant? We're well into technobabble land if that's being invoked to account for sound in space 🤦‍♂️
 
  • Like
Likes russ_watters
  • #41
Melbourne Guy said:
Really, the fine structure constant? We're well into technobabble land if that's being invoked to account for sound in space 🤦‍♂️
Believe it or not aural sensors explain away sound in space (at least in the Legends material.). I think for storytelling purposes we hear sound; but I’m sure the characters don’t hear anything if in a vacuum
 
  • #42
Maximum7 said:
I think for storytelling purposes we hear sound;
I think that is the right way to go.
Mark it up as "creative license in the telling of the story", i.e. not as an intrinsic part of the Star Wars Universe.
 
Last edited:
  • Like
Likes russ_watters
  • #43
DaveC426913 said:
Mark it up as "creative license in the telling of the story", i.e. not as an intrinsic part of the Star Wars Universe.
Can there be a difference, @DaveC426913? It's not like the Star Wars universe is 'out there somewhere', it only exists in the storytelling!
 
  • #44
Melbourne Guy said:
No amount of thinking is going to create a 'science' that allows sound in space, but nonetheless, it's there!
I've done it.
 
  • #45
Melbourne Guy said:
Can there be a difference, @DaveC426913? It's not like the Star Wars universe is 'out there somewhere', it only exists in the storytelling!
If I guess correctly, the OP is writing a technical manual for the SWU. The premise of such a manual is that it lives within the universe it's describing. Put another way, it does not break down the fourth wall.
 
  • Like
Likes Melbourne Guy
  • #46
DaveC426913 said:
If I guess correctly, the OP is writing a technical manual for the SWU. The premise of such a manual is that it lives within the universe it's describing. Put another way, it does not break down the fourth wall.

Basically correct.
 
  • #47
I am amused that people want scientific accuracy in a movies where a) the creators did not care about scientific accuracy, especially if it got in the way of the story, and b) uses a unit of length as if it were a unit of time.
 
  • Like
Likes DennisN, russ_watters, phinds and 1 other person
  • #48
What I want to know is why the baddies, from orcs to stormtroopers, can never shoot straight? If you have FTL travel, you'd think you'd have an effective weapon to shoot at an enemy 10m away.
 
  • Like
Likes russ_watters
  • #50
O course, the same reasons underlying the apparent current Russian military incompetence could apply to storm troopers: Poor training, corruption, no competent mid-level NCOs, poor motivation.
 
  • Like
Likes russ_watters and PeroK
  • #51
PeroK said:
What I want to know is why the baddies, from orcs to stormtroopers, can never shoot straight? If you have FTL travel, you'd think you'd have an effective weapon to shoot at an enemy 10m away.
Quantity over quality. The Empire produced millions of clones, but they used a crummy Xerox machine.
 
  • #52
Vanadium 50 said:
I am amused that people want scientific accuracy in a movies where a) the creators did not care about scientific accuracy, especially if it got in the way of the story, and
It is on the same continuum as the Star Trek Technical Manual, just a little more toward the hand-wavey end.

Vanadium 50 said:
b) uses a unit of length as if it were a unit of time.
No. That's an assumption we all made, and it was cleared up (retconned) in Solo: A Star Wars Story where it was shown how he made the Kessel Run in the shortest distance.
 
  • #53
PeroK said:
What I want to know is why the baddies, from orcs to stormtroopers, can never shoot straight?
It's the helmets. Shoot? It's a wonder they can walk!

DaveC426913 said:
and it was cleared up (retconned)
Of course it was.

Speaking of retcons, Han shot first.
 
  • Like
Likes russ_watters, berkeman and DaveC426913
  • #54
Star Wars fusion works via the Force.
It is used to compress the Mass,
thus creating the Energy.
 
  • #55
Algr said:
Star Wars fusion works via the Force.
It is used to compress the Mass,
thus creating the Energy.
That is as good an explanation as any, @Algr. Of course, it leads to, "...and what is the Force?" but fortunately he OP asked about fusion so we don't need to scurry down that wormhole 😁
 
  • #56
Melbourne Guy said:
Of course, it leads to, "...and what is the Force?"
This question is well covered here:
20100426_apWG.png

https://www.egscomics.com/comic/2010-04-26
 
  • Like
Likes BillTre
  • #57
Melbourne Guy said:
"I could suggest that the FTL isn't anything of the kind, it's actually a dimensional jump to the next nearest parallel universe that matches the desired location, but a nanosecond out of phase so the protagonists never meet themselves and expose the trick!"
This idea is used in the "Collapsing Empire" trilogy by John Scalzi. Except that the "nanosecond out of phase" is not necessary, because this, for all that is the same in it, is really a different universe from where they just came, with no identical replicas of them to be met in it until right now, and they are the replicas. There are several things wrong with this idea, but why let logic spoil a good story?
 
Last edited by a moderator:
  • Like
Likes Melbourne Guy
  • #58
Beyond the surfeit of other handwavium, struck me that SW having convenient gravity control provides a fairly easy way to do fusion. Just use it to keep your uppity plasma in the middle...
 
  • Like
Likes russ_watters
<h2>1. What is fusion?</h2><p>Fusion is a nuclear reaction that occurs when two or more atomic nuclei combine to form a heavier nucleus. This process releases a large amount of energy.</p><h2>2. How does fusion work in Star Wars?</h2><p>In the Star Wars universe, fusion is used to power the lightsabers and the hyperdrive engines of spaceships. It is also the source of energy for the Death Star's planet-destroying laser.</p><h2>3. Is the fusion in Star Wars based on real science?</h2><p>While the concept of fusion is based on real science, the way it is portrayed in Star Wars is not entirely accurate. For example, in real life, fusion requires extremely high temperatures and pressures, while in Star Wars it can be achieved with a small device like a lightsaber.</p><h2>4. Can fusion be used to create weapons like lightsabers?</h2><p>In theory, fusion could be used to create weapons similar to lightsabers, but it would require a lot of energy and technology that is not yet available. Additionally, the intense heat and radiation produced by fusion reactions would make it difficult for a human to wield such a weapon safely.</p><h2>5. How does fusion compare to other forms of energy in the Star Wars universe?</h2><p>Fusion is considered to be the most powerful and efficient form of energy in the Star Wars universe. It is used for both peaceful purposes, such as powering cities and spaceships, as well as for destructive purposes, like the Death Star's laser. Other forms of energy, such as antimatter, are also mentioned in the Star Wars universe, but fusion remains the most commonly used and understood form of energy.</p>

1. What is fusion?

Fusion is a nuclear reaction that occurs when two or more atomic nuclei combine to form a heavier nucleus. This process releases a large amount of energy.

2. How does fusion work in Star Wars?

In the Star Wars universe, fusion is used to power the lightsabers and the hyperdrive engines of spaceships. It is also the source of energy for the Death Star's planet-destroying laser.

3. Is the fusion in Star Wars based on real science?

While the concept of fusion is based on real science, the way it is portrayed in Star Wars is not entirely accurate. For example, in real life, fusion requires extremely high temperatures and pressures, while in Star Wars it can be achieved with a small device like a lightsaber.

4. Can fusion be used to create weapons like lightsabers?

In theory, fusion could be used to create weapons similar to lightsabers, but it would require a lot of energy and technology that is not yet available. Additionally, the intense heat and radiation produced by fusion reactions would make it difficult for a human to wield such a weapon safely.

5. How does fusion compare to other forms of energy in the Star Wars universe?

Fusion is considered to be the most powerful and efficient form of energy in the Star Wars universe. It is used for both peaceful purposes, such as powering cities and spaceships, as well as for destructive purposes, like the Death Star's laser. Other forms of energy, such as antimatter, are also mentioned in the Star Wars universe, but fusion remains the most commonly used and understood form of energy.

Back
Top