ntypical said:Please read the whole post.
I did read your whole post. I simply believe that you're applying a term... entropy... in a sense that it isn't really applicable to.
As I said before. Energy in the form of warp plasma, that is fed from the core, to the nacelles will suffer from losses.
If you want to start tossing around real science terms like entropy, you've gotta be consistent in applying real science to the discussion. "Warp Plasma" does not in any way represent energy. Plasma is a form of MATTER, not of ENERGY.
How "warp plasma" is used to CARRY ENERGY is a subject that's been debated in this forum several times. Some people would argue that this plasma is made up of the reactant products of the matter/antimatter reaction, but that's not really reasonable, since a m/am reaction results in essentially complete annihilation of mass and conversion of said mass into energy (in accordance with the famous E=mc^2 bit we've all seen so many times).
So what is "warp plasma?" Well, the three most common arguments seem to be:
1) It's used as a high-efficiency conductor... plasma IS very effective as carrying electrical charge, as it's totally and completely dissociated (as compared to metals where you only have loosely-bound electrons carrying that charge, in plasma the positive and negative elements are totally unbound).
2) It's used to carry heat (which I think is your argument).
3) It's used as a form of wave-guide medium (similar to fiber-optics) to carry electromagnetic energy.
There is a fourth option, of course, which is the TRUE answer:
4) It's used to carry magical mystical "technobbablish energy."
Well, addressing the three forms of energy we actually understand... electromagnetic potential differences, electomagnetic radiation, and thermal energy... are the only places we can apply real science. So I'll ignore #4.
Well, the next thing to consider is how this could actually be used to DRIVE anything.
- Electromagnetic potential differences... ie, electricity... can be used to generate all variety of field effects. We know warp drive is a field-effect system, so this seems like the most likely approach.
- Electromagnetic radiation can be used to ... well, to illuminate stuff, sometimes in very esoteric ways (and perhaps a strong enough "beam" with a perfect enough focus could actually create a pseudo-singularity?) Usually, though, unless we want to scan something or burn something, we always need to convert E/M radiation into electrical energy prior to it being useful. And even scanning really requires a conversion from E/M into something else (say a chemical film as in an x-ray, or a video camera, just for example).
I'm at a loss how thermal energy... which is, really, just vibration... would be able to be used to create a field-effect propulsion field. Perhaps you have an idea?
Anyway, what you SHOULD have said is "energy, in the form of either electricity, E/M radiation, or heat, is provided to the nacelles. Plasma is NOT a form of energy, it is a form of MATTER.
Because you can not have two cores in the exact same place. One would have to be further from the nacelles than the other.
Really? So, are the two nacelles also in the exact same spot? Because by your argument, made just here, the nacelles cannot be the same distance from a single core.
Allowing for more heat to bleed off the system, ending in less useable energy reaching the nacelles.
ONLY if you assume (1) the warp engines run on heat, and (2) there is minimal insulation capacity in warp transfer conduit construction. (Which lead to my comment about vaporizing the whole crew, by the way).
Do you have ANY IDEA how much energy is generated by the annihilation of one gram (assume 0.5g of matter and 0.5g of antimatter in perfect annihilation).
Assuming a perfect annihilation, this gives you 8.98755E+13 joules of energy per gram of fuel annihilated.
Converting that into a term that you can understand a bit better, assuming you're in the US or someplace else where this is used, that gives you 2.496542e+7 kilowatt-hours.
24,965,420 kilowatt-hours per gram of reactant.
Now... I wasn't able to pull up, in short working order, a total power generation list for the USA, only for certain sectors. But as an example, all nuclear power plants in the USA put out a total YEARLY output of 674,000,000,000 kilowatt-hours (hydroelectric is a bit lower... about half as much... and everything else I found was listed in terms of fuel consumed and I didn't feel like doing the conversions!)
This translates to the equivalent of 26,997 grams of reactant... or just 27 KILOGRAMS... being able to match the total power output of the entire US nuclear power program. And that's 1/2 simple hydrogen, so we're talking about 13.5 kilograms of antimatter... a bit under 30 lbs.
Now, if that much energy was being transferred in the form of HEAT, and if even the most infinitesimal amount of that escaped into the ship's interior as lost heat, you'd be vaporizing the crew.
So you need to ensure that you have a condition where no reactant product heat can escape into the ship's interior. This would be done by the use of magnetic containment... preventing ANY physical contact between the superheated transfer medium and the containing conduits. No atmosphere, nothing. ZERO PHYSICAL CONTACT.
Anything else will simply kill the crew and melt the ship!
You've gotta take the SCALE of the thing into account... ya know?
If this system has heat, either as a desired method of energy transfer or as an undesired but unavoidable byproduct, you've got to isolate the hot material from everything, and establish PERFECT insulation.
In which case, a few extra meters of virtually-perfectly-insulated travel would be insignificant.
Also because you would essentially be using more WPS conduits you would see even more of a loss.
Not really. Sure, the shorter the length the better the efficiency, but the loss per meter of plasma transfer conduit would be infinitesimal compared to the power carried by them.
A bigger concern would be the amount of power required to run the isolation/containment field generators for the conduits. That might actually be MEASURABLE, though still insignificant compared to the power output of the system.
WIKI is not the best resource... it's a great place to start, but not the end-all/be-all of resources.
Entropy is simply the tendency of the universe to move from order to disorder. You see this as much in thermal situations (a hot spot on an object tends to dissipate to a more uniform elevated temperature throughout the object), certainly, but you also see it in what's called "brownian motion"... put some food color in a glass of water and it dissipates uniformly... going from being highly organized (a drop) to being highly disorganized.
That's entropy. And in thermodynamics (which every engineer has studied in depth, though mechanical guys like me focus on it to a ridiculous extent) this SOMETIMES means "energy which is considered lost." But it remains entropy even if the energy was never intended to be used.
Whoever wrote that article was evidently a combustion engineer, since the way he described it was typical for how internal combustion engine guys talk about this. In that case, you have mechanical energy (basically displacement of a piston) and you have waste heat.
But there is NOTHING associated with the real meaning of Q that relates in any way to mechanical work. It's just about the amount of energy that you lose and can't get back due to the tendency of the universe to move towards disorder.
And no they are would not be instantly vaporized. We all know that warp plasma is very hot. But due to effective re distribution methods in the WPS they are able to use a majority of that lost heat for other things.
We know that? You think that they channel the ship's coffee-maker past the warp plasma conduits? 
The TRUTH is that we know NOTHING about this... because there is no such thing as a "warp plasma conduit" in real life. But trying to apply real science to it (as you were doing, and which I'm playing along with) means that the above statement really is nonsensical. Waste heat is waste heat. If you USE that energy for some purpose, it's not actually "waste heat" anymore, is it? It's a "tap" off of the main power out.
Of course, you ALWAYS have losses... that's what your reference to Q should have told you. And the change in entropy over time... delta-Q... is always positive. So the waste heat MUST be dissipated from the ship in some manner, or else the crew will be crispy-fried faster than you can snap your fingers.
But they can not put that heat back into the system that drives the ship. SO you are still looking at losses to the nacelles.
Demonstrate, please, how you believe that HEAT somehow is translated into field-effect energy at the warp nacelles? It's not a boiler running a turbine (which, for the record, is how modern nuclear and combustion-based naval vessels work). Or do you think that's what it's doing?
I think it's quite clear that heat is either (1) wasted energy, or (2) must be converted into some other form through some process to become usable.
So the over all losses would be greater from multiple cores for the reasons stated above, and in my previous post.
I GET your point, perfectly well. But short of having the m/am reaction occur INSIDE THE WARP COILS, you'll always have this issue. And in every "treknology" example we've ever been given, the reactor is always a reasonable distance from the field generation hardware (in the case of the 1701-D, for instance, it's the better part of a kilometer away!)