I'm thinking of the Voyager episode where time was moving faster for the people on the planet they were trapped in orbit around.
You mean, "Blink of an Eye."
I'm thinking of the Voyager episode where time was moving faster for the people on the planet they were trapped in orbit around.
If humans were to move to that planet and colonize it, the universe (and the star that the planet and black hole were orbiting) would age over 6 million years while humans only experienced 100 years of life on the planet. How further beyond 6 million years would that solar system and planet even be stable?Hell, they could probably tell more from space than on the surface when (according to their initial calculations) they would have to wait 168 years for Miller to accumulate a single day's worth of planetary data!
If humans were to move to that planet and colonize it, the universe (and the star that the planet and black hole were orbiting) would age over 6 million years while humans only experienced 100 years of life on the planet. How further beyond 6 million years would that solar system and planet even be stable?Hell, they could probably tell more from space than on the surface when (according to their initial calculations) they would have to wait 168 years for Miller to accumulate a single day's worth of planetary data!
If there is literally no other planet in the galaxy capable of supporting humanity, maybe you would consider that one. But you really shouldn't, as just a ragtag fleet of colony ships floating among the stars would be a far better option.
Outside of Miller's planet being a water planet, I had to wonder how they landed on it and what they were walking on after landing.
The floating frozen cloud on Mann's world didn't make much sense either.
Truthfully for me a romance between Brand and Coopermakes sense to me, he not only willingly sacifices himself to save but he goes back to her in the end, although the movie really does head in that direction
Emotionally the movie is pretty powerful, but in the end for all Cooper goes though in the movie he's pretty forgotten about by the end. The fact that they recreated his house and we saw a similar scene of Cooper sitiing on his porch drinking a beer was surreal to say the least. Although seeing the baseball player hitting the ball in that window was a nice callback to Inception and the earlier baseball scene.
Locutus said:He spent more time having a beer with his robot.
Awesome. Thank you!Hey, FSM, did you want the animated version of your Tesseract avatar? I reduced the file size so it fits the TBBS limits.
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That whole Earth side part of Cooper reminded me of a scene from a Tim Robbins comedy, IQ, where he tell Einstein and his friends about a SciFi story of two brothers and relativity asking which is happier. Analogously, Murphy is as she has her family and history but for Cooper time has just passed. He has no place on Earth apart from Murphy and Brand is still out there not knowing what happened to Earth, Cooper, or even if what she is doing is completely futile. Even without the romance, it made sense for Cooper to go back and see through the mission there. That's where his life is more than Earth.
Awesome. Thank you!Hey, FSM, did you want the animated version of your Tesseract avatar? I reduced the file size so it fits the TBBS limits.
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I suppose so, his response was a rather anticlimactic agreement with her in the end, but since he was relating more to the youngster he left than the old woman he saw perhaps it's a reasonable bit of scene. Both know they should be feeling something but they are both ghosts to each other now.That whole Earth side part of Cooper reminded me of a scene from a Tim Robbins comedy, IQ, where he tell Einstein and his friends about a SciFi story of two brothers and relativity asking which is happier. Analogously, Murphy is as she has her family and history but for Cooper time has just passed. He has no place on Earth apart from Murphy and Brand is still out there not knowing what happened to Earth, Cooper, or even if what she is doing is completely futile. Even without the romance, it made sense for Cooper to go back and see through the mission there. That's where his life is more than Earth.
Oh, I totally agree. I have no problem with him going off to find Brand. It was just how rapidly it happened. I get that there was no place for him in the solar system anymore and that he was an explorer and Brand's the only one who can relate to him now, but I don't think spending some more time with your daughter before she dies is going to make a huge difference after you tried so hard to get back to her.
Strictly speaking neither of those episodes dealt with strict "time dilation" dealing with the warping of time due to gravitational fields but with some other MacGuffin (usually sub-space) causing the time-distortion.
Outside of Miller's planet being a water planet, I had to wonder how they landed on it and what they were walking on after landing.
They were essentially walking on a beach that never gets dry. If there wasn't the higher gravity creating the giant waves, the "land" would probably be a seafloor twenty or thirty feet deep. But since the giant waves constantly keep pulling in the water out to build up the wave (like how water recedes on a beach ahead of a tsunami) it remains a shallow two feet or so between waves.
I understand that we can't see a planet surrounding Gargantua due to it being in another galaxy. I also understand that texoplanets we have seen that might be in that zone.. well we don't know for sure if they can support life. However, there is more to science than just seeing them, and I believe that even today we can make educated guesses based on a myriad of data that will tell us if those planets are likely to support life. Hell, Nasa even hires artists to draw what they think the planets look like, and they aren't inteded to be fantasiy illustrations, but illustrations that are instead based all that evidence and data that we have. Surely when the Endurance crossed over the wormhole, theyd be able (even with todays' technology) make a survey of thee planets. If they can't they can send probles down from orbit, without risking down there. Surely once they saw how inhospitable Miller and Mann's planets were they wouldn't risk the "time" to go down there to simply retrieve some data recorders.I'm not sure we've yet got telescopes that can *see* planets in the "Goldilocks Zone" we just know they're there due to the effects they have on their parent star or by seeing their "eclipse" as they pass in front of a star. But we're a long, long way off from physically seeing a planet enough to be able to tell what is on it and how it is made up. All we can tell is "there's something there in the Goldilocks Zone so, eh, maybe." And even if we can/could see planets we certainly wouldn't be able to see ones in other galaxies, which is where we're told the Garganutan System was.
I'm not sure we've yet got telescopes that can *see* planets in the "Goldilocks Zone" we just know they're there due to the effects they have on their parent star or by seeing their "eclipse" as they pass in front of a star. But we're a long, long way off from physically seeing a planet enough to be able to tell what is on it and how it is made up. All we can tell is "there's something there in the Goldilocks Zone so, eh, maybe." And even if we can/could see planets we certainly wouldn't be able to see ones in other galaxies, which is where we're told the Garganutan System was.
I wrote a review on comicbooked.com, but in my opinion the weakest part of the film was the actual mission (not getting there, not the visuals). Even now, we can see with reasonable certainty which planets could support life in a goldilox zone from thousands of light years. Yes the system they went to is much further away, but once they left the wormhole, going to the planets' surfaces might not be necessary to determine if a planet was habitable. Even a low orbit would tell them (hey this place is drenched in water, and it's too close to the black hole), things like that.
The movie is so strong, but I think Nolan underestimates our ability to survey a planet.
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