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Chebucto Regional Softball Club

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  2. Uncategorized
  3. All of 'em defeated with one line
A forum for discussing and organizing recreational softball and baseball games and leagues in the greater Halifax area.

All of 'em defeated with one line

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rpgmemes
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  • D dev_null@lemmy.ml
    Unless the space station is not orbiting. Maybe it's a mobile one like the Desthstar.
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    Guest
    wrote last edited by
    #17
    ... the death star orbits. The timer for the rebels to blow it up in a New Hope was how long its orbit would take to clear the moon in its path to the rebel base. The battle of endor was fought over the new death star in orbit over the moon. Yes, the death star is capable of warp, but that just puts it into orbit over different things.
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    • ? Guest
      I want to play a game where there is an NPC roving band of guerrilla peasants that in times of crisis form a rail gun militia. Dragons? Rail gun. Tax Administrator? Rail gun. Cathy's Baby Shower? Also believe it or not, rail gun.
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      quetzalcutlass@lemmy.world
      wrote last edited by
      #18
      > Cathy's Baby Shower? Also believe it or not, rail gun. Handing out gifts at the speed of sound.
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      • ? Guest
        Fun fact about this in real life: A problem that gunmakers have had to deal with is that, although a faster-moving bullet fires straighter and penetrates better into its target, if the bullet moves *too* fast it will just poke a hole straight through a person without imparting enough of its kinetic energy onto them to be able to do real damage.
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        Guest
        wrote last edited by
        #19
        That is simply not true. All you have to do is design your projectile in shape, construction and materials so the kinetic energy gets properly used to cause damage to the target. A tiny 40 grain .204 Ruger bullet with the absolutely insane muzzle velocity of 4100 fps will absolutely explode a watermelon if you use a rapidly expanding projectile such as a basic tipped varmint round. As a matter of fact, the problem you can recounted with projectiles that go too fast is that they will over expand and under penetrate depending on the nature of the target.
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        • ? Guest
          Pure theory, likely never ever going to be real, but could a bullet move so fast that it goes through someone without even damaging them?
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          quetzalcutlass@lemmy.world
          wrote last edited by
          #20
          No, but it travels fast enough it would disintegrate and you could argue the resulting fireball would be what actually damaged the target. [Relevant XKCD.](https://youtu.be/3EI08o-IGYk)
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          • ? Guest
            Terminal velocity for a human is not fast enough to cause air to heat up. You'd probably get frostburn instead.
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            Guest
            wrote last edited by
            #21
            Hold up. Didn’t some guy drop balls off a roof to show that things fall at the same speed?
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            • ? Guest
              Pure theory, likely never ever going to be real, but could a bullet move so fast that it goes through someone without even damaging them?
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              Guest
              wrote last edited by
              #22
              Any matter going through you with that much mass is going to cause damage no matter how fast it goes. Billions of particles called neutrinos are moving through you right now as you read this but they are around 100,000,000,000,000x less massive than a hydrogen atom
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              • ? Guest
                Hold up. Didn’t some guy drop balls off a roof to show that things fall at the same speed?
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                Guest
                wrote last edited by
                #23
                So, yes and no. Acceleration due to gravity impacts all objects equally. With no air resistance, on earth, everything speeds up at 9.8m/s/s. But, that "no air resistance" is a big asterisk. This is why, say, parachutes work. It's also how we get terminal velocity. Often misinterpreted as "how fast you'd have to go to die from a fall" it's actually "how fast you need to go before the drag from your air resistance is a force greater than or equal to gravity"
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                • ? Guest
                  Pure theory, likely never ever going to be real, but could a bullet move so fast that it goes through someone without even damaging them?
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                  Guest
                  wrote last edited by
                  #24
                  Not really applicable but think there could be a small chance it would quantum tunnel through the person but that's such miniscule chance.
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                  • ? Guest
                    So, yes and no. Acceleration due to gravity impacts all objects equally. With no air resistance, on earth, everything speeds up at 9.8m/s/s. But, that "no air resistance" is a big asterisk. This is why, say, parachutes work. It's also how we get terminal velocity. Often misinterpreted as "how fast you'd have to go to die from a fall" it's actually "how fast you need to go before the drag from your air resistance is a force greater than or equal to gravity"
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                    wrote last edited by
                    #25
                    Right. That all makes sense. So the air resistance is what is also causing it to heat up. I still don’t see why a person wouldn’t do that.
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                    • ? Guest
                      Right. That all makes sense. So the air resistance is what is also causing it to heat up. I still don’t see why a person wouldn’t do that.
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                      Guest
                      wrote last edited by
                      #26
                      So, multiple options here. Skydivers regularly hit terminal velocity, as fast as they'll go in atmosphere, before pulling their chutes. At these speeds, heat from friction isn't enough to worry about. Once again though, if you're coming down from space, that "in atmosphere" asterisk goes away. If you're dropping from a satellite, you're going at speeds necessary to orbit, and you don't have anything slowing you down until you hit the atmosphere. Suddenly your terminal velocity is way lower than infinity, and the friction you're feeling from the atmosphere is INTENSE, rapidly turning that speed into heat
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                      • ? Guest
                        So, multiple options here. Skydivers regularly hit terminal velocity, as fast as they'll go in atmosphere, before pulling their chutes. At these speeds, heat from friction isn't enough to worry about. Once again though, if you're coming down from space, that "in atmosphere" asterisk goes away. If you're dropping from a satellite, you're going at speeds necessary to orbit, and you don't have anything slowing you down until you hit the atmosphere. Suddenly your terminal velocity is way lower than infinity, and the friction you're feeling from the atmosphere is INTENSE, rapidly turning that speed into heat
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                        Guest
                        wrote last edited by
                        #27
                        Alight cool. All basically what I figured. Thanks!
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                        • ? Guest
                          That is simply not true. All you have to do is design your projectile in shape, construction and materials so the kinetic energy gets properly used to cause damage to the target. A tiny 40 grain .204 Ruger bullet with the absolutely insane muzzle velocity of 4100 fps will absolutely explode a watermelon if you use a rapidly expanding projectile such as a basic tipped varmint round. As a matter of fact, the problem you can recounted with projectiles that go too fast is that they will over expand and under penetrate depending on the nature of the target.
                          A This user is from outside of this forum
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                          AwesomeLowlander
                          wrote last edited by
                          #28
                          I get the feeling the 4 million grain Revolving Peasant Gun with the velocity of 1% the speed of light will have the desired effect on any target.
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                          • ? Guest
                            ... the death star orbits. The timer for the rebels to blow it up in a New Hope was how long its orbit would take to clear the moon in its path to the rebel base. The battle of endor was fought over the new death star in orbit over the moon. Yes, the death star is capable of warp, but that just puts it into orbit over different things.
                            D This user is from outside of this forum
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                            dev_null@lemmy.ml
                            wrote last edited by
                            #29
                            Yes it orbits in the movies, that doesn't conflict with anything I said. I'm describing a scenario where it doesn't (which doesn't happen in the movies).
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                            • ? Guest
                              If a character has 121hp or more they're able to jump from a space station onto earth with like a super hero landing??
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                              Guest
                              wrote last edited by
                              #30
                              Alternatively, invest 18 levels into monk and get **no damage** in 99,51% of cases https://anydice.com/program/40317
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                              • ? Guest
                                If a character has 121hp or more they're able to jump from a space station onto earth with like a super hero landing??
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                                skulblaka
                                wrote last edited by
                                #31
                                Yes. ODST-Dropping your barbarian is objectively the best way to have him enter combat, and it inflicts psychological damage to anyone close enough to witness it.
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                                • A AwesomeLowlander
                                  I get the feeling the 4 million grain Revolving Peasant Gun with the velocity of 1% the speed of light will have the desired effect on any target.
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                                  Guest
                                  wrote last edited by
                                  #32
                                  What makes you say that?
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                                  • ? Guest
                                    What makes you say that?
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                                    AwesomeLowlander
                                    wrote last edited by
                                    #33
                                    Well I'm being tongue in cheek, but I don't see how a peasant travelling at a significant fraction of the speed of light will not obliterate anything he hits (along with himself)
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                                    • D dev_null@lemmy.ml
                                      Yes it orbits in the movies, that doesn't conflict with anything I said. I'm describing a scenario where it doesn't (which doesn't happen in the movies).
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                                      Guest
                                      wrote last edited by
                                      #34
                                      Your example was for a space station that doesn't orbit and you used the death star for that, which does orbit. Does that make sense to you? Cause it's baffling me
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                                      • ? Guest
                                        Your example was for a space station that doesn't orbit and you used the death star for that, which does orbit. Does that make sense to you? Cause it's baffling me
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                                        dev_null@lemmy.ml
                                        wrote last edited by
                                        #35
                                        No, it was not an example of a station station that doesn't orbit. It was an example of a mobile space station. Feel free to reread my comment.
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                                        • ? Guest
                                          ... the death star orbits. The timer for the rebels to blow it up in a New Hope was how long its orbit would take to clear the moon in its path to the rebel base. The battle of endor was fought over the new death star in orbit over the moon. Yes, the death star is capable of warp, but that just puts it into orbit over different things.
                                          ? Offline
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                                          Guest
                                          wrote last edited by
                                          #36
                                          It _can_ orbit. It doesn't _have_ to. It's capable of moving between systems, it's not confined to a single gravity well.
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