- Joined
- Dec 12, 2018
Yeah, I'm a moron, heat sinks are only heat sinks when they specifically cool by convection. How spacecrafts do it is seems more like household radiators.They're all gonna radiate a little.
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Yeah, I'm a moron, heat sinks are only heat sinks when they specifically cool by convection. How spacecrafts do it is seems more like household radiators.They're all gonna radiate a little.
If I had a dollar for every time someone said that the next nutrek product would be good and was wrong I'd be able to afford treatment for the cancer they gave me.So I have it on good authority (Robert Meyer Burnette, who knows Star Trek better than even Mike does) that season 3 of Picard is... excellent? Legitimately good. A completely different showrunner came in (the dude who did Syfy Channel's 12 Monkeys, which was alright) and did the final season right, apparently.
They're all gonna radiate a little.
Spacecraft radiate heat by converting it into infrared radiation.Yeah, I'm a moron, heat sinks are only heat sinks when they specifically cool by convection. How spacecrafts do it is seems more like household radiators.
Don't those also use mostly convection despite the name?household radiators.
Yes. Water is heated and moved to a radiator which disperses the heat through the air. But the convection part is only the coolant being heated by components and moved to the radiator in the actual ISS as far as I can tell, when it's dispersed into space that seems to be entirely the radiator, which seems to actually radiate heat unlike household radiators.Don't those also use mostly convection despite the name?
It wouldn't be conduction in a vacuum, would it? You can't "touch" a vacuum.A vacuum radiator eliminates heat by conducting it away through pure blackbody radiation, and a spherical shape like the death star is literally the worst form it could take in terms of efficiency. Even though the surface is rough and has smaller structures that would maybe be more effective as we see in the trench run, they would suffer from interreflection, and lose efficiency by absorbing the thermal energy of radiators next to them. Remember, it's literally infrared photons shooting away at perpendicular angles, and it does you no good to recapture them.
I'll take my puzzle pieces.
No. It's pure radiation. The description is fine except that one word.It wouldn't be conduction in a vacuum, would it? You can't "touch" a vacuum.
Congratulations. You've just come up with an idea that Jar Jar came up with.But hang on. Space is cold. Pretty darn cold, if I remember rightly. Near absolute zero, in fact. (Though not at absolute zero because I understand the Third Law of Thermodynamics now; clever dick, aren't I?) And from the Second Law of Thermodynamics I know that heat will naturally flow from a hot place to a colder place. So if we build great big towers full of some heat-conducting material, from the surface of Coruscant so tall that they stick out into space, the heat will naturally flow up the towers away from the planet and into the cold of space! Brilliant!
The difference here is RMB has actually seen the season from beginning to end (unfinished in terms of special effects and ADR, but it apparently had music at that point), and he's also intensely autistic when it comes to Star Trek. He's hated everything Trek-related since 2009, and he's spent many, many hours ranting about it on his channel. (It's maybe the only thing he really gets negative about on his shows.) And he loathed seasons one and two. If he's wrong, I don't see how it's possible.If I had a dollar for every time someone said that the next nutrek product would be good and was wrong I'd be able to afford treatment for the cancer they gave me.
If Mike can go on constant tangents about Star Trek this thread can go on a tangent about heat sinks.
Chabon was involved. That makes sense, tried reading one of his books once. Lots of nonsensical plots that went nowhere.The difference here is RMB has actually seen the season from beginning to end (unfinished in terms of special effects and ADR, but it apparently had music at that point), and he's also intensely autistic when it comes to Star Trek. He's hated everything Trek-related since 2009, and he's spent many, many hours ranting about it on his channel. (It's maybe the only thing he really gets negative about on his shows.) And he loathed seasons one and two. If he's wrong, I don't see how it's possible.
Kurtsman is gone from Picard. So is Michael Chabon. If they somehow manage a soft reboot of the show and kind of redeem it at the end, I imagine that would make Mike pretty happy.
He is? Oh good. Can they make him be gone from the planet, next?Kurtsman is gone from Picard.
Yeah, about that....So I have it on good authority (Robert Meyer Burnette, who knows Star Trek better than even Mike does) that season 3 of Picard is... excellent? Legitimately good. A completely different showrunner came in (the dude who did Syfy Channel's 12 Monkeys, which was alright) and did the final season right, apparently.
I hope Mike and Rich cover the final season. I want to see them happy about Star Trek again. (Their suffering is great, don't get me wrong. But it would be a change of pace.)
One, that's Mike rejecting an image of Old Worf, not the news that season is unexpectedly solid.
eh strange new worlds was...okayIf I had a dollar for every time someone said that the next nutrek product would be good and was wrong I'd be able to afford treatment for the cancer they gave me.
So I have it on good authority (Robert Meyer Burnette, who knows Star Trek better than even Mike does) that season 3 of Picard is... excellent? Legitimately good. A completely different showrunner came in (the dude who did Syfy Channel's 12 Monkeys, which was alright) and did the final season right, apparently.
I hope Mike and Rich cover the final season. I want to see them happy about Star Trek again. (Their suffering is great, don't get me wrong. But it would be a change of pace.)