Well, my bad, but it wasn't clear what he was asking about, and the movie is almost sixty years old anyway.
Kaziarl wrote:
It's been a long time, years in fact, since I've seen it, so I could be misremembering. Although I seem to recall the earth stopping for a moment in more then a metaphorical sense.
I know the movie itself was more about human tendency towards violence, and that if they didn't shape up before reaching into space they were going to be put down. I could have sworn the alien, Klaatu, had stopped the earth for just a moment to back up that warning.
Regardless of what Huxley said years before Jurassic Park was made, I do remember the idea that birds evolved from dinosaurs was considered a crazy idea. Around the time the movie came out I remember discussing it with one of my teachers who said it was a ridiculous notion that a creature that had existed for so long with scales would suddenly shrink in size and grow feathers.
He was probably referring to the pterodactyl in regards to size.
I dunno. I didn't see Red Matter as that much more unbelievable then Proto-Matter in TWOK.
No, it was pretty bad. Even then, they knew that birds were the descendants of dinosaurs.
I think that if the black hole was large enough to swallow the Narada it was large enough to swallow the Enterprise.TWoK was a story that looked at many aspects of living and dying. The genesis device served to enhanced the movie's theme by showing that even in death and destruction, new life can be born. For that, I find it easier to forgive the lack in scientific accuracy.
On the other hand Red Matter served no such higher purpose in Star Trek. It gets worse. One tiny drop of Red Matter was able to destroy an entire planet of several billion Vulcans. Yet a whole gallon of that same Red Matter only created a black hole tiny enough to destroy a single Romulan mining ship. The black hole was not even big enough to swallow the Enterprise! Does not compute.
I think that if the black hole was large enough to swallow the Narada it was large enough to swallow the Enterprise.TWoK was a story that looked at many aspects of living and dying. The genesis device served to enhanced the movie's theme by showing that even in death and destruction, new life can be born. For that, I find it easier to forgive the lack in scientific accuracy.
On the other hand Red Matter served no such higher purpose in Star Trek. It gets worse. One tiny drop of Red Matter was able to destroy an entire planet of several billion Vulcans. Yet a whole gallon of that same Red Matter only created a black hole tiny enough to destroy a single Romulan mining ship. The black hole was not even big enough to swallow the Enterprise! Does not compute.
Also the black hole that "swallowed" Vulcan was created in the center of the planet. It didnt have to be larger than the planet to destroy it.
I thought a black hole has no size as it's a singularity.
I think that if the black hole was large enough to swallow the Narada it was large enough to swallow the Enterprise.
Also the black hole that "swallowed" Vulcan was created in the center of the planet. It didnt have to be larger than the planet to destroy it.
Makes sense. I guess the Enterprise was close enough to the Narada Black Hole be threatened by its pull.I think that if the black hole was large enough to swallow the Narada it was large enough to swallow the Enterprise.
Well, of course it's a function of distance. Contrary to myth, black holes don't actively reach out and suck you in with some kind of magic supergravity -- at a distance, you'd feel no more pull from a black hole of mass M than you'd feel from a regular star of mass M. But since black holes have all their mass concentrated in a point, you can get arbitrarily close to them, and it's when you get close -- closer than you could possibly get to the center of mass of a star or planet -- that the gravity goes up sufficiently (by the inverse square law) to pose a serious hazard.
So if a black hole forms in the middle of your starship, the tidal stress from its gravitational pull could tear you apart, but a ship relatively nearby would be far less affected.
Its a two plus hour movie...they didnt have CenturiesIn theory, that's true; it would eventually suck in the entire planet. The problem is that all that infalling mass would get in its own way -- like a crowd filing into a stadium through a single door, it could only fall in a little at a time and the rest would have to wait its turn. It would probably take centuries for a black hole to swallow a planet, depending on its massAlso the black hole that "swallowed" Vulcan was created in the center of the planet. It didnt have to be larger than the planet to destroy it.
I think that if the black hole was large enough to swallow the Narada it was large enough to swallow the Enterprise.
Well, of course it's a function of distance. Contrary to myth, black holes don't actively reach out and suck you in with some kind of magic supergravity -- at a distance, you'd feel no more pull from a black hole of mass M than you'd feel from a regular star of mass M. But since black holes have all their mass concentrated in a point, you can get arbitrarily close to them, and it's when you get close -- closer than you could possibly get to the center of mass of a star or planet -- that the gravity goes up sufficiently (by the inverse square law) to pose a serious hazard.
So if a black hole forms in the middle of your starship, the tidal stress from its gravitational pull could tear you apart, but a ship relatively nearby would be far less affected.
Also the black hole that "swallowed" Vulcan was created in the center of the planet. It didnt have to be larger than the planet to destroy it.
In theory, that's true; it would eventually suck in the entire planet. The problem is that all that infalling mass would get in its own way -- like a crowd filing into a stadium through a single door, it could only fall in a little at a time and the rest would have to wait its turn. It would probably take centuries for a black hole to swallow a planet, depending on its mass.
From a practical standpoint, showing the raptors as plausibly feathered would have been nearly impossible in 1993. Jurassic Park pushed then-current CGI to its limits modeling life-like skin and scales. With the uncertainty about the evolutionary relationship and the effects limitations, it's no wonder Spielberg portrayed the dinosaurs in a more traditional fashion.After all, Jurassic Park had the benefit of consulting with Jack Horner, one of the world's leading paleontologists. Spielberg did take poetic license here and there, like making the Velociraptors larger and more dangerous than they were known to be (though this turned out to be art presaging life, since the larger Utahraptor was discovered shortly afterward), but the film had the benefit of cutting-edge paleontological knowledge by the standards of 1993. And yet it didn't depict its raptors as feathered, because a lot of what we know or believe about dinosaurs today wasn't known or accepted yet in 1993. The field has come a long way in 18 years.
The red matter made just as much scientific sense as the so-called "Genesis wave." If one "does not compute" neither does the other.
Is there, in fact, any good science in TWOK? Exploding planets, ships hitting the edge of a nebula with a "bump!"....
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