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I saw a mecha anime at college last Saturday and I don't remember what the shit it was called, but it was pretty cool, very cartoony and the robots were called "Ganmen" or something, and they were like in a giant walking ship and some hot chick with a rifle named Yoko was in it. Any ideas?
That would be Gurren Lagann, most likely.
Probably one of , if not the best, anime of 2007.
Yeah, after seeing the first 2 eps I will agree with that sentiment. I'm curious to see where they take it. However I do have a complaint having to do with either the translation or if its not the translator's fault then their science consultant (if they have one) should be shot. In the second episode they mention (at least in the sub that I watched) at the beginning that they have an array of solar panels encircling the Earth that extends for 50,000,000 km. Lets do some math shall we?1. Distance between the Earth and Sun: 149,000,000 km; so they are saying that they managed to build an array that if stretched out straight would reach a third of the way to the sun? Where the heck did they get the material for that? Hell you could reach Venus with that amount of material (if it was straight across from us).2. If this encircles the Earth and does it only in one pass then the radius of the circle must be 8,000,000 km. This is larger than the distance between the Earth and the Moon which is 384,000 km. This means that since it is tethered to the space elevators then the entire system is severly effected by the orbit of the Moon. In fact the Moon would run into the space elevators eventually.3. In order to have a stable space elevator the center of mass has to be at GEO (Geosynchronous Orbit) which exists at a distance of 42,000 km. If this is the true location of the ring then the circumference of the ring would be 264,000 km. If their length is 50,000,000 km this means that the ring must encircle the earth at least 189 times.4. Given a solar panel size of say 1 km in radius (just for the sake of an estimate). Your total collecting area would be 50,000,000 km^2. If you calculate the total power output you end up with something on the order of 7x10^16 Watts. This is 1000 times the amount of energy used today. I'm not really arguing this point its just a point of curiousity.Given the size of the earth from the ring around it I would say that they actually wanted it stationed at GEO. Either someone messed up in their math, threw out a random number that sounded big enough, or the translation got screwed up. Usually Gundam is pretty good at keeping things at least mostly scientifically correct or plausible.Sorry for the math, this is what happens when you are an astrophysicist watching a scifi.
Seconded.As for Gundam 00, it seems decent enough so far
Fifteen, if you count OVAs.
damn, that's a lot of mech mayhem.
I've not seen this series but this concept fascinates me. If you'll allow me to offer my thoughts:1. I am almost certain it would be circular (or oval or oblong). The stress on a straight or unclosed curved form of such immense size would be too much. Better to build it round and enclosed and allow centrifugal physics to help stablize the shape. Depends on thickness but I imagine at a few centimeters wide you could probably scrounge up most of that material from the asteroid belt, if you found sufficient amounts of silicates and other required heavy metals.2. Perhaps the elevators/tethers are not physical but electromagnetic or some other energetic form that can be broken and reconstructed at will. Or, more likely, the solar ring is not oriented along the same plane the moon travels but at a highly inclined orbit. Thus, you could have permanent tethers at high latitudes that remain outside of the moon's sweep. Ideally, the ring would be inclined at about 60 degrees to the earth (and 90 degrees to the sun), so that its entire surface is always pointed at the sun. At very low inclinations, the ring would be routinely eclipsed by the earth, moon, or perigeeal side of the ring itself, reducing its effeciency - furthermore, both sides of the ring must be coated in solar panels to recieve solar energy in this fashion (or your panels are only useful 50% of the time). At a right angle to the sun, only one side needs to be coated. (Furthermore, Van Allen belt radiation would be at minimum in this orientation, further reducing things you'd have to worry about.)3. 42,000 km is geostationary for any unpowered object. You could get something at different altitudes to orbit at the same rate the earth spins but it takes expenditure of power. At the size we're talking, the ring would have to spin at a rate of 580km/sec - wow. In short, I don't think it could be geostationary at that size, nor could the tethers be anything but energetic and temporary.4. We undoubtedly use many thousands of times more power now than a century ago. It stands to reason the future Earth would require similarly more power than we use today. I'd be more inclined to the think that the ring is much thinnner (on the order of 10-50 meters wide) but comprised of much more efficient solar panels than we have today.Barring the geostationary bit, I think its a reasonable idea. Don't know how they would account for devestating coronal mass ejections though.
Wow. Are you guys from NASA or something? So many difficult words... everything... is spinning... @__@
Nope, I have my BS in Physics and I'm currently working on my PhD in Astrophysics at the University of Minnesota. I do simulations of particle acceleration in astrophysical shocks.As far as JG's points are concerned:1. I agree but you will need some sort of propulsion to counter the solar wind if you are at that scale. Also it would not be tethered to the Earth.2. I also agree.4. Well there is no free lunch is there. Microwaves may work or you could if you really wanted to make a giant mirror and reflect the light down to the surface to undergo conversion there (but that's a whole new can of worms).5. Actually I think the dominant contributor to the electrical current in the conducting ring won't be the free electrons from the local plasma but rather from the changing flux of the magnetic field (Faraday's Law). For just a back of the envelope calculation just taking the normal solar cycle of 11 years, and the normal solar wind magnetic field of about a nanoTesla you end up with an ElectroMotiveForce of about 45 kiloVolts, not too shabby. Of course the magnitude and direction of the magnetic field in the solar wind changes faster than that but I don't have any of the timescales or magnitudes handy but I imagine you could could get some decent power out of it. Heck the Earth's own Ring Current has a decent current to it if you could tap it (I don't remember the amperage of the top of my head).A forum for this stuff might be fun, though I'm not sure if any one else would participate.