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What is the red matter (spoiler)

DarkStar

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What exactly is the red matter, anyway? I'm not clear on that. It's a giant red ball of some sort.

We see old Spock take a sample and Nero use some and at the end, the red matter appears to be exploding. What is the red matter?
 
From Countdown....

cdetrxre54.jpg
 
What exactly is the red matter, anyway? I'm not clear on that. It's a giant red ball of some sort.

We see old Spock take a sample and Nero use some and at the end, the red matter appears to be exploding. What is the red matter?

Magic stuff to move the plot along. ;)
 
red matter is dark matter doppler shifted to the red end of the spectrum because it is moving away at close the speed of light. ;)

sorry didn't mean to technobabble, just trying to make my 50 post quota ;)
 
It was an artefact from the Delta Quadrant. They took just over a dozen Omega Molecules and condensed them into a stable structure that could be used as a handy plot device to do anything the user desires.

Some call it "Omega 13". :bolian:
 
Was I the only one who when saw the red matter for the first time was taken back to the big red gravitational ball, created by the Rambaldi device in JJ Abrams Alias?

alias422_548.jpg
 
To me, it looked like something that escaped from a lava lamp.
 
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For that matter, why did they have to carry such a huge ball of the stuff around when they only needed the smallest pea sized amount?
 
For that matter, why did they have to carry such a huge ball of the stuff around when they only needed the smallest pea sized amount?

And to further that, wouldn't that massive amount have caused an extremely large black hole or something, much bigger than even what we saw?
 
Maybe it doesn't scale and after you reach a certain point (a gram or so of it), it has serious diminishing returns to the point of not more than doubling the effects no matter how much you add. It could also be more stable in larger quantities?

It is still dumb, but far from the biggest issue.
 
I think Red Matter could be a particle that decays into inflatons - the particles associated with the field that created inflation in the early universe. Or they could be some kind of "reverse-inflatons" that caused a contractions of spacetime (hense, singularities).

One peculiar aspect is that it warps spacetime more than they should. Since it creates a wormhole, it could create a large gravitational field in one end and a large "anti-gravitational field" at the other end. So the net effect is zero. Or it might open up a wormhole near large gravitational sources (Nero came out near a star IIRC) - the gravity leas through the red-matter wormholes.

Lots of possibilities... What if it was that "exotic matter" which could be used to create "real" warp drives? I doubt it was dark matter - it doesn't work that way.
 
Maybe it doesn't scale and after you reach a certain point (a gram or so of it), it has serious diminishing returns to the point of not more than doubling the effects no matter how much you add. It could also be more stable in larger quantities?

It is still dumb, but far from the biggest issue.

I think it might be more stable as a big ball than little drops.
 
Was I the only one who when saw the red matter for the first time was taken back to the big red gravitational ball, created by the Rambaldi device in JJ Abrams Alias?

alias422_548.jpg


Bingo! I got a definite ALIAS vibe from that.

Which is cool. I was a big ALIAS fan.
 
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