I think that Trek XI is a good movie, and I can rationalize most of the plot holes, but I can't figure out how red matter is supposed to stop a supernova.
When I picture a super nova, I think of the explosion as a sphere expanding through space. If you hit this sphere with the red matter, as Spock did, then I would expect that at best you would poke a hole in the sphere. I guess if the Romulan's home solar system was the only one close enough to be threatened, then this might work.
I guess another possibility is that the supernova was more like a gamma ray burst (Wikipedia), and the danger was that Romulus was lined up with one of the exploding star's poles.
And then there is the question of how exactly the red matter stops the supernova. Does the black hole somehow suck all the energy up, or was the red matter meant to work in some other way and the formation of a singularity was unintended?
When I picture a super nova, I think of the explosion as a sphere expanding through space. If you hit this sphere with the red matter, as Spock did, then I would expect that at best you would poke a hole in the sphere. I guess if the Romulan's home solar system was the only one close enough to be threatened, then this might work.
I guess another possibility is that the supernova was more like a gamma ray burst (Wikipedia), and the danger was that Romulus was lined up with one of the exploding star's poles.
And then there is the question of how exactly the red matter stops the supernova. Does the black hole somehow suck all the energy up, or was the red matter meant to work in some other way and the formation of a singularity was unintended?