November 9th, 2005 by
Abbas Halai

so here’s a kick ass write up on how the death star functions. it covers the basics, the interior, the surface, the superlaser, the life aboard the death star, and much more including what would really happen if you actually blew up a planet.
interestingly enough, came across this secondary article which may just end up being the coolest essay i’ve ever read. this fellow goes on a rant about how the trash compactor within the death star was just not supposed to be there. his arguments range from leia’s knowledge of the compactor, the empire’s rules of garbage disposal, the creature living in the compactor, the inefficient compacting walls, and many more. it’s a brilliant read. obviously dictates a fair knowledge of having seen star wars: a new hope a fair number of times.
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November 9th, 2005 by
Abbas Halai
DROWNING IN QUICKSAND IS IMPOSSIBLE, according to a new study, relegating this popular plot device in adventure stories to the category of pure folklore. Consisting of a mixture of sand, salt water, and clay, quicksand captured the attention of University of Amsterdam physicist Daniel Bonn when he went on a family trip to Iran, the birthplace of his wife. Collecting a sample of quicksand near a body of water in Iran, and bringing it to his laboratory for study, Bonn and his colleagues showed that shaking aluminum beads, designed to have the same density as human beings, would partially, but never fully, submerge them. Since quicksand is twice as dense as water, the beads (and humans) only sink about halfway. Shaking or otherwise disturbing the quicksand liquefies it, increasing the downward flow of the beads by a factor of a million. This is how humans can get stuck in it. Since quicksand is often located near bodies of water, Bonn speculates that high tidal floods passing over individuals stuck in quicksand may have caused casualties incorrectly ascribed to sinking fully in it. Bonn says his conclusions apply to all kinds of quicksand. Nonetheless, the force required to lift a foot out of quicksand can be equal to that required to raise a car. His solution: wiggling the stuck foot will cause water to trickle down, allowing the hapless adventurer to get out of it. (Khaldoun et al., Nature, September 29, 2005)
via aip
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