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  • A long time ago a great disturbance was felt in the force as millions of voices cried out

  • in terror, and were suddenly silenced. But c'mon, could the Death Star really blow up

  • a planet?!

  • It's Star Wars day, you guys (screams)

  • Hey jedis and siths, Trace Windu here for DNews -- get it?

  • Like

  • Mace?

  • Okay

  • A key plot point in the original Star Wars story was the destruction of the planet Alderaan

  • by the Death Star as a show of force to the Rebel scum. Then, after the destruction, an

  • asteroid field formed around Alderaan's star, but c'mon... would all this really happen?!

  • Yes, the movie is science fiction, but when have we nerds ever let that stop us from sciencing

  • the sh*t out of something?

  • Okay, first we need to know how much energy it takes to blow up a planet, then we can

  • work out if the Death Star can blow up something so much bigger than itself. Alderaan is an

  • M-Class planet, right?

  • It's earth-like and similarly sized. Three nerdy researchers at the University of Leicester

  • calculated how much power the Empire would have to impart into the planet to get it to

  • overcome its own gravity and fly in all directions. It's a really big number: 2 octillion joules.

  • The World Energy Consumption is only 56 billion joules!

  • So these numbers are pretty difficult to fathom. Let's put it in perspectives we can comprehend,

  • sort of

  • The power of our whole sun is 380 septillion joules, astronomers call this ONE solar luminosity.

  • Ahh, small numbers.

  • So, the energy required to blow up a planet, according to these researchers would be 5.2

  • solar luminosities, or the amount of energy of our Sun releases in a week. Which is pretty

  • insane. Phil Plait, Bad Astronomer and internet-winner extraordinaire, says depending on the planet's

  • size though, it could be more like 582,000 solar luminosities!

  • That would take 57 quadrillion megaton nuclear bombs to blow up!

  • I love me some Plait, but for the sake of simplicity let's go with the studentswe

  • want it the answer to be in reach, after all.

  • To generate all that energy, we need to understand how the Death Star is powered. According to

  • authors in the Extended Universe, I know, its hypermatter reactor is as powerful as

  • "several main-sequence stars." As we're basing these numbers on our own Sun's power of one

  • solar luminosity, the Death Star may throw power around equivalent to say seven of our

  • sun -- or seven solar luminosities!

  • THATS WAY MORE THAN the 5.2 needed to blow up a planet!

  • Note: our sun is a relatively small main-sequence star, so this is a pretty conservative estimate.

  • But, it could be even easier than all that. Shooting a big laser at a planet would just

  • heat it up -- and you'd have to get through all that mass to reach the core and vaporize

  • itvery unlikely. Popular Mechanics got a bunch of SciFi authors together and brainstormed

  • the problem. My favorite hypothesis is that the superlaser fired by the Death Star is

  • positronic; a positron is a positively charged antimatter twin of an electron!

  • If they fired a pure antimatter beam at Alderaan it would cause massive matter-antimatter explosions!

  • When matter and antimatter meet, they annihilate each other in a huge release of energy. Because

  • these antimatter-matter reactions are so powerful, according to author Ethan Siegel, you'd only

  • need the amount of antimatter equivalent to 0.00000002 percent of the mass of the planet

  • being destroyed!

  • Even Phil Plait agrees that might do it!

  • But then what?

  • In 1977, George Lucas described Alderaan as a planet in a system, it not exactly canon,

  • but other planets definitely exist. When the Death Star's superlaser destroys it what happens

  • to those six other planets?

  • Not too much. Asteroids accelerated by the release of heat and pressure from inside the

  • planet would shoot toward the outer reaches of their solar system, but overall the Alderaan

  • system would be about the samethe mass of the planet would distribute around a new

  • asteroid belt; and the system would move on

  • Think of it like Mars' moon Phobos, it's set to be torn asunder in the next 50 million

  • years, but it won't disrupt the orbit, the mass is going to be pretty much the same.

  • A quick wobble, then back to business as usual.

  • Look, this is science fiction, it's a fanciful story. But the best part about science is

  • it can make these stories feel more real. Arthur C. Clarke's Third Law of Scientific

  • Prediction is, "Any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from magic."

  • If the Empire can wield many times the power of our whole sun in a single spacecraft -- it

  • would be like magic to us. But of course, no matter how powerful the Death Star was,

  • it is insignificant, next to the power of the Force. I'd like to thank Dr. Natalie Hinkel

  • for helping me with all this stellar math, btw!

  • She's awesome.

A long time ago a great disturbance was felt in the force as millions of voices cried out

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