would like to discuss Romulan Tech with anyone who is interested
^Might as well post this here, as it's something that's been bugging me--
You can't turn an evaporating black hole off. That has got to be a cooling issue--at least (hey, maybe we can finally explain the weird construction of the D'Deredix; the double wings are a liquid helium circulator).
One of the things I've noticed about the D'Deridex is that the ship's design encloses a large hollow area. I have a bit of trouble believing the quantum singularity is located in a small containment vessel with a unlocked access door. The ship's shape suspends the infinitely small singularity in the center of this hollow. The singularity moves with the ship. The D'Deridex is the size it is because of the equipment needed to maintain the singularity, maintain it's position and extract power from it.... specifically about how they utilize the singularities to power their ships.
Except it can't be in the center of the aperture, we'd see it.
You can't turn an evaporating black hole off. That has got to be a cooling issue--at least (hey, maybe we can finally explain the weird construction of the D'Deredix; the double wings are a liquid helium circulator).
Or did the Romulans simply buy Klingon designs from a third party, built their ships to their own specs, with a different power source?
The discussion of caputred quantum singularities is interesting, but it brings up another question in my mind:
In all of STAR TREK, we see several generations of Romulan ships-of-the-line. The TNG-forward ships are undoubtedly built by the Romulans themselves using very advanced technology (by apparent in-Universe Federation standards). But let's also remember that earlier versions of their fleet may or may not have been built by Romulans: "The Enterprise Incident" comes to mind. Spock reported "Intelligence reports Romulans now using Klingon design" as we see Kirk's Enterprise surrounded by Klingon cruisers manned by Romulans. Does this imply that the Klingons had captured quantum singularities harnessed as power sources for this era of their cruisers? Or did the Romulans simply buy Klingon designs from a third party, built their ships to their own specs, with a different power source?
And what about "Balance of Terror"? Is the Romulan Bird of Prey also powered in the same way? Circulated on the 'net is a story of how an earlier version of the "Balance" script also contained speculation that the Bird design may have been stolen from Earth/Federation ships. So did these earlier Romulans ships use their own power source technology, or did they rely on the matter/antimatter reactors built by others?
Of course, it's all nebulous and not strictly canon, but it does make one wonder about the history and design lineage of Romulan starships...
I like the notion of continually throwing junk into the black hole to keep it radiating steady. That's a good idea.
A problem would be that a singularity is small even by atomic standards.The problem as I see it is that it would be hard to get anything near enough to it that it wouldn't get blown away. A 275,000 ton object compressed beyond its Schwarzchild radius is going to have negligible attractive power outside that radius (which is why I figure normal, stellar-collapse black holes are the original sources of the Romulan power plants...). If the output were magically stopped, you wouldn't feel the gravity of a black hole that small if you were a meter away from it.
The hawking radiation is believed to be composed from photons. If the energy emitted by the singularity surpasses the energy/rest mass of another quantum particle, then the black hole will emit pairs of particles/antiparticles of this kind along with photons (gamma rays).It may be more efficient in some ways--I'm unsure if the reaction products from a black hole are any different than a normal annihilation reaction. I believe the main reactants are e- and e+ pairs, which afaik pretty invariably generate gamma photons. Proton-antiproton reactions lose a lot of energy to useless neutrino creation. On the other hand, the energies of the individual photons in e-/e+ reactions are spectacularly less than that of proton-antiproton collisions of the same kinetic energy, due to the 2000-fold difference in rest mass. This may make a difference to power generation depending on how the materials involved make use of the photons.
Indeed, that's true. I hadn't thought of that.A problem would be that a singularity is small even by atomic standards.
The wavelength of a "junk" atom/molecule might be too large for the singularity to see and absorb this atom/molecule.
Timo said:What makes you think they don't?
A fairly satisfactory setup would have the torpedo's engines propelled by annihilation of deuterium and antideuterium, with the former in abundance, and possibly even providing propellant mass for the potential sublight engine of the weapon. The package would be standardized in external dimensions, but the interior would perform different functions depending on how it was fueled up.
For long range hits, one would pack up more on antimatter, so that there'd still be some bang left at the target. Basically all matter would be exhausted in propulsion, then, providing no yield boost.
For demolition hits, one would program a more sedate flight profile and favor matter, so there'd be annihilation-primed fusion at the target.
Indeed, that's true. I hadn't thought of that.A problem would be that a singularity is small even by atomic standards.
The wavelength of a "junk" atom/molecule might be too large for the singularity to see and absorb this atom/molecule.![]()
I saw the black-hole drive thing the other day. I guess it's a doable concept, although I seriously question the "present day physics and technology" claim of the article, which isn't really made by the authors in their brief, who, like good scientists, already raised most of the objections I had.![]()
About the D'Deridex:
Notice that the emissions of an evaporating singularity cannot be seen in the visible spectrum - quantum particles and gamma rays.
Perhaps the D'Deridex carries its singularity at the center, in that large empty area. We see nothing there because the black hole can't be seen with the naked eye - maybe, if one uses sensors, that area of the ship shines like a small sun.
Yeah, but the hull would reradiate them in the visual spectrum as it was heated, and there seem to be no special photoelectric cells or anything to that effect.![]()
In the trekverse, a singularity is kept in place, probably, by antigravity containment fields - they force the singularity to move along with the ship.I wonder about how you would mechanically couple the force of a rocket (impulse drive, whatever) to a black hole. You can impart momentum to a black hole, to be sure, but it's probably a lot more complicated than doing so to a industrial-sized Penning trap. Pushing on the dilithium cage or whatever used to hold the black hole is just going to increase the frequency of the gamma rays, which would, if mostly reflected, presumably transfer their momentum to the black hole. But it does raise some engineering questions--and might explain the lack of conventional rocket drives on the D'D.
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