Valid points. Let's see if I can come up with any useful answers.Patrick Degan wrote: Problems:
1. A planet has within its structure countless fissures which would scatter any NDF effect. The mantle will not experience any sort of uniform disintegration.
2. The Earth's core is nickel/iron; not especially dense on the atomic scale. The reaction would not "stop dead". Furthermore, any such planet-busting weapon dependent upon a chain-reaction would be energised sufficently to induce the reaction in the liquid metallic core.
3. I hate to have to remind you of this, but gravity simply won't disappear. A planet is not a pressure boiler waiting to blow apart. The planetary mass will still tend to coalesce around a central point from mutual gravitational attraction unless acted upon by an extraordinary outside force.
1. I'm not certain that it's really germane to the situation. I believe the TNG episode relating to this is "A Matter of Time," in which the Ent-D very quickly drills large, tidy holes into the upper crust layers of a planet. The fissure structures of the top layers of the crust should be considerably more pronounced than those of the mantle. There's also the fact that a sufficiently large input of fictional NDF energies should allow even the beam's scattered fragments to disintegrate the material surrounding the fissures.
2. Phasers don't appear to have much luck with nickel/iron. Otherwise there would not be so many dangerous asteroids successfully resisting the power of the shipboard phasers of Voyager and the Ent-D. Also, in most models of the Earth's interior, the core is divided into two distinct layers: the relatively thin layer of liquid nickel/iron of the outer core, and the larger inner core's sphere of nickel/iron that would be liquid if it weren't under such intense pressure from the mantle. It's not unreasonable -- though hardly inevitable -- to conclude that the inner core's exceptionally dense, superheated nickel/iron, liberally laced with what should be the majority of the planet's share of elements more massive than iron, would be highly resistant to the fire of ST beam weapons. What happens to the liquid portion of the core is of secondary importance.
3. In real life, without handwaving magical superscience available, you're absolutely correct. The presence of the mantle's mass, which can not just magically disappear in real life, would certainly prevent the pressure cooker scenario. On the other hand, the alien equivalent of a giant phaser drill disintegrating a large portion of the mantle will release pressure on the inner core, and the inner core would most likely undergo an abrupt increase in volume and decrease in density. Also, of course, a giant phaser drill should qualify as an extraordinary outside force.
On the other hand, there is the entirely real possibility that I might be completely wrong, and it wouldn't be the first time.


