You rock!Jason L. Miles wrote:TNG Phaser Reaction Statistics Notes
Here are the notes from TNG.
I found some webspace I had forgotten about.

Moderator: Vympel
You rock!Jason L. Miles wrote:TNG Phaser Reaction Statistics Notes
Here are the notes from TNG.
I found some webspace I had forgotten about.

Nitpicker.Slartibartfast wrote:I think the eyeshadow was a bit too dark...Batman wrote:Proof that anything was unusual in the makeup of the aliens.
Did you even read the thread? Phasers having KE effects on the target is a KNOWN FACT, because we've seen it on screen.drachefly wrote:As for the KE:
Not that I think that phasers act by KE transfer, but it is quite possible for a phaser to have a KE effect on the target without having a significant KE effect on the firer...
For which there is NO EVIDENCE WHATSOEVER.IF we assume that some of the internal energy of the phaser blast is converted into KE through an explosion in some fashion.
What kickback? In your grenade example there would be no kickback either, why assume there ought to be any in phasers (the unapplicability of your example notwhithstanding)?Like, if you toss a grenade at a wall and it knocks the wall over, you don't immediately conclude that this situation was unphysical because your arm and body didn't absorb all the impulse of the wall falling over.
Where is the kickback going? There's a better question, probably one we can't answer. Subspace, anyone?
I suggest you rewatch the scene in STIII. A person who can throw himself back like that (voluntarily or not) ought to put on a cape and fight crime.Oh, and as for knocking people off their feet, we could take a cue from the pre-exploding asteroids in the turbolaser commentaries and suggest that perhaps the leading edge of electromagnetic channel of the phaser causes a nerve impulse which causes the victim to throw himself backward as if he were an actor in a low-budget TV show. Oh, wait...
i just chalk up reactions to phaser blasts to being akin to reactions of getting an electrical shock. electricity has almost no noticeable kinetic energy to speak, but the reaction that occurs when someone gets zapped is going to be noticeable.brianeyci wrote:This is what people see,
1. Phaser shoots, person's shoulder doesn't get dislocated
2. People/Borg/Whatever get pushed back (to varying degrees)
Since they don't see the middle stage, they assume that the pushing back has to be some sort of "technobabble" effect. WHAT A LOAD OF BULLSHIT. There is obviously a transit stage between the phaser blast hitting the target and the person being pushed back.
It is obvious that somewhere along the way, the phaser particles gain kinetic energy somehow. Resorting to "technobabble" and then saying that phaser shots therefore have no kinetic energy is ridiculous. How much kinetic energy is up for debate. I'm waiting for Section31.com to get its movie screencaps up -- does anybody remember how far the Reman was thrown back in Nemesis? (I haven't seen it) Does the throwing back look like a ballistic trajectory?
Brian
Good explaination for dustbusters and cobra phasers. But Jason Miles did some research of his own, and I believe he concluded that pulse phaser rifles are the only reliable source of kinetic energy.Darth_Zod wrote:i just chalk up reactions to phaser blasts to being akin to reactions of getting an electrical shock. electricity has almost no noticeable kinetic energy to speak, but the reaction that occurs when someone gets zapped is going to be noticeable.
If there is a definition that defines explosion as any 'momentum exchange interaction', I'll be glad to concede, assuming you can show the definition.1 : to burst forth with sudden violence or noise from internal energy: as a : to undergo a rapid chemical or nuclear reaction with the production of noise, heat, and violent expansion of gases <dynamite explodes> b : to burst violently as a result of pressure from within
 )
 )Phasers have not been demonstrated to do this in any other instance, and they were on a planet where physical laws were being violated by the second. Translation -- phaser impacts have not been seen to throw someone like that anywhere else, so basing a theory of phasers on a single incident is hardly satisfying.Batman wrote:2. The 'electrical shock' theory breaks down in the face of the phaser incident from STIII, where a Klingon is physically picked off his feet and thrown several meters through the air
Holy shit. Newton's third law is basically what stands between the way of "technobabble" explaining the throwing back. Obviously, because a person is thrown back by a phaser, the only way for him to be thrown back is for a force to be exerted on him. The mechanism for momentum is precedented by all of history. The precedent for this "technobabble" explaination? Subspace incursion? Tunneling effect? The Force? You can't explain away what you don't like with an undefined mechanism.(in a manner inexplainable by KE transfer BTW so the phaser beam 'somehow' gaining KE is not an explanation (how this is supposed to be more plausible than technobabble is beyond me anyway)).
You've GOT to be kidding. You're actually attempting to give validity to Darkstar's idiotic take on that scene, to "explain" why Crusher's arm wasn't "tooc-ed?"brianeyci wrote:Lore shooting to scare Beverly, etc. If someone is deliberately trying to miss or is using a handicapped weapon, it shouldn't be included in the general statistics --
Evidence that this influenced the effects of the phaser, please.brianeyci wrote: Phasers have not been demonstrated to do this in any other instance, and they were on a planet where physical laws were being violated by the second.
Why not? It's exactly what you're doing. Unless you can explain the mechanism by which phaser particles magically gain KE in mid-flight?You can't explain away what you don't like with an undefined mechanism.
The phaser particles "gaining" KE somehow is the only rational explaination.
Who said anything about Darkstar? Holy shit. So do you actually think that Lore was trying to KILL Beverly? First of all, the context of which I brought this up did not have anything to do with the "power" of a phaser, and had everything to do with accuracy. Second of all, Lore shooting Beverly and making the coat go on fire means as much as the Leia arm scene -- fucking jackshit. We know fucking phasers can blow holes in rock and vaporize people, and one incident of a person using a lower setting isn't representative of the capabilities of phasers. By the way. I'm not DS. Leia being hit in the arm means jackshit, if the trooper was using lower settings as ORDERED to by the Emperor. Just like being hit in the arm with a phaser that we know to have sixteen settings means jackshit.Lord Poe wrote:You've GOT to be kidding. You're actually attempting to give validity to Darkstar's idiotic take on that scene, to "explain" why Crusher's arm wasn't "tooc-ed?"
Lore fucking counts to three to tell Beverly to run away. Now if Lore wanted to kill Beverly, do you think he would have fucking counted to three and told her to run away? If Lore counted to three, and told Beverly to run away, there are a few possibilities. Lore wanted to have fun and set the phaser to a low setting to burn the coat off. Lore wanted to tell Beverly to run away, then shoot her in the back. It is definitely not "Lore wanted to kill Beverly outright", which Lore could have done easily at any time without wasting time saying "leave at the count of three" or anything else.TNG Datalore Script wrote:
DATA
I will stay with Wesley, Doctor.
LORE
Go! Or he'll be shrieking on the
count of five. One... two...
72 ANOTHER ANGLE (OPTICAL & SPECIAL EFFECTS)
Beverly panics, hurries toward the small door where
they had entered.
BEVERLY
I'll bring help, Wesley.
LORE
Thank you for my human quality,
Doctor Soong.
(aiming phaser)
Now a small payment for your son's
misdeeds.
LORE PHASERS BEVERLY, a BEAM which strikes her left
arm in a FLASH OF FIRE.
Holy fucking shit, that's like saying "why did the Emperor order his troops to capture them alive, when he was probably going to kill them in the end anyway." There are many reasons, from Lore being a sadistic bastard who wanted to take a child hostage and shoot at someone for fun, to being logical and wanting to leave as much food for the crystalline entity as possible to please it. I don't see how you can conclude anything about the capabilities of phasers in this scene, other than one of the sixteen settings being incredibly low.What you'll have to ask yourself is, WHY would Lore be "scaring" Crusher and deliberately miss, use a super-duper low power shot, whatever else Darkstar can pull out of his ass, if Lore was eventually going to feed the entire crew to the Crystalline Entity? Oops.
I can't produce evidence that this influenced the effects of the phaser. However, one instance of the phaser doing one thing that has not been repeated again doesn't mean you should base an entire theory of phasers around it.Batman wrote:Evidence that this influenced the effects of the phaser, please. While we're at it, evidence that laws of physics were being violated by the second.
Drachefly is defining how phaser particles gain KE. There is no explaination of how there would be a violation of Newton's Laws with the technobabble mechanism. Either at some point the phaser particles gain KE and impact on the target, or there is no KE and technobabble magically spurts a force up to push the target backwards. Or are you violating Newton's first law along with Newton's third law with the technobabble? Holy shit.Why not? It's exactly what you're doing. Unless you can explain the mechanism by which phaser particles magically gain KE in mid-flight?
Because that's one of his key arguments against why Crusher's arm wasn't destroyed.brianeyci wrote:Who said anything about Darkstar?
What's good for the goose....Holy shit. So do you actually think that Lore was trying to KILL Beverly?
First of all, the context of which I brought this up did not have anything to do with the "power" of a phaser, and had everything to do with accuracy.
Except in the Leia scene, she was meant to be taken prisoner. Crusher wasn't under such protection.Second of all, Lore shooting Beverly and making the coat go on fire means as much as the Leia arm scene -- fucking jackshit.
So frustrating, ain't it?We know fucking phasers can blow holes in rock and vaporize people, and one incident of a person using a lower setting isn't representative of the capabilities of phasers.
Sorry, this crap is rearing its ugly head again, and I plan on being just as stubborn as the VS Trekkies are. Thems the breaks...By the way. I'm not DS. Leia being hit in the arm means jackshit, if the trooper was using lower settings as ORDERED to by the Emperor. Just like being hit in the arm with a phaser that we know to have sixteen settings means jackshit.
The phaser databank is totally Jason Miles work. I just made a suggestion to account for accuracy. I believe the majority of his work concerns phazorizations and hit-misses.You said "scare Beverly" in the context that you wanted "variables" like this properly represented in that phaser databank you gents are collecting. That indicates to me you want to explain the scene away when it comes to power.
She was ordered by Lore to run. It could mean Lore wanted her to run, or that Lore wanted to shoot her in the back. Can't say which Lore wanted.Except in the Leia scene, she was meant to be taken prisoner. Crusher wasn't under such protection.Second of all, Lore shooting Beverly and making the coat go on fire means as much as the Leia arm scene -- fucking jackshit.
Cool. Misdirected to target it at me though, because I don't even accept the Leia arm scene as representative of blaster firepower anywaySorry, this crap is rearing its ugly head again, and I plan on being just as stubborn as the VS Trekkies are. Thems the breaks...
 .
.Emphasis Mine.LORE
(raising phaser)
Then why this marvelous gift, my
brother? The troublesome little
man-child.
(circling; to Wesley)
Are you prepared for the kind of
death you've earned, little man?
This is too much for Beverly. She draws her major
phaser, aiming it at Lore.
BEVERLY
If you take one step toward my
son...
Startled, Data takes his eyes off Lore for just a
fraction of a second... enough for Lore to send Data
spinning to where he blocks Beverly's aim. Wesley
tries to move in to help but Lore has already chopped
again at Data, spinning into Beverly, easily taking
the phaser away from her. He makes a quick setting
on it. Data is coming to his feet to attack Lore.
LORE
Ah, motherhood!
(aims phaser at Wesley)
Back off or I'll turn your little
man into a torch!
Frightened for Wesley, Beverly backs off. Lore makes
another quick setting, holding phaser on Wesley.
LORE
I promise him exquisite pain
unless you obey me too, dear
brother.
BEVERLY
Move away, Data, please!
Data backs off a few steps.
LORE
Do you see now the advantages of
being completely human?
(to Beverly)
It includes kindness. I give you
your life, Doctor. Go, quickly
and I may not injure your son at
all.
STAR TREK: "Datalore" - 10/26/87 - ACT FIVE 57.
71 CONTINUED: (2)
Beverly is willing to die if it helps her son. But
leaving him this way?
DATA
I will stay with Wesley, Doctor.
LORE
Go! Or he'll be shrieking on the
count of five. One... two...
You are quite welcome, it was my pleasure to help.Batman wrote:First off, thanks, Silence. I was apparently working with a too narrow definition of explosion. Conceeded.
I'm not BASING the entire theory on it. Unless and until somebody shows that phasers CANNOT behave like this, I maintain that the theory needs to explain this incident.brianeyci wrote:I can't produce evidence that this influenced the effects of the phaser. However, one instance of the phaser doing one thing that has not been repeated again doesn't mean you should base an entire theory of phasers around it.Batman wrote:Evidence that this influenced the effects of the phaser, please. While we're at it, evidence that laws of physics were being violated by the second.
No shit Sherlock. Planets are usually not created by the Genesis torpedo either, so normal panetary behavior is not exactly the ideal matchstick for Genesis.The Genesis planet was "aging rapidly" and ended up exploding itself apart. I'm not a physics buff, but I know that planets don't normally self-destruct.
And if you bother to check, he explicitely states that them doing so in mid-flight would be odd at the very least.Drachefly is defining how phaser particles gain KE.Why not? It's exactly what you're doing. Unless you can explain the mechanism by which phaser particles magically gain KE in mid-flight?
For which you have no evidence, and even Drachefly agrees that that would be stange at the very least,There is no explaination of how there would be a violation of Newton's Laws with the technobabble mechanism. Either at some point the phaser particles gain KE and impact on the target
I like it how you assume that since the beam doesn't have noticeable KE there will be none applied to the target. How about the KE is provided by something that happens to the target?or there is no KE and technobabble magically spurts a force up to push the target backwards.
I am doing nothing of that kind. There are obviously KE/momentum effects applied to phaser targets. That does not mean that phaser particles carry said KE/momentum.Or are you violating Newton's first law along with Newton's third law with the technobabble? Holy shit.