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The Physics of Star Trek by Lawrence M. Krauss
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The Physics of Star Trek

by Lawrence M. Krauss

Series: Star Trek

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82975,209 (3.52)15
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Basic Books (2007), Edition: Revised, Paperback, 280 pages

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Excellent explanations of the physical laws used and abused by the TV series-chain. Also very entertaining: Kraus knows his episodes and his science. See Booklog. ( )
  librisissimo | Apr 17, 2009 |
Excellent discussion of how Star Trek (and its ilk) mangled physics generally, while managing to predict advances and use them before the scientists did. ( )
  booklog | Apr 14, 2009 |
This review was also published, in a slightly enhanced & more comfortable format, at my blog between drafts.

Because I have watched a good deal of conversations and discussions with Krauss on the Intertubes, I knew beforehand that he wasn’t so much interested in talking about the physics of Star Trek but in Star Trek as a, well, vehicle to get some physics across to mainstream audiences. (Whereby, yes, nerds or geeks do indeed count as mainstream nowadays :-)). And, quite naturally, Lawrence M. Krauss isn’t too far away from being a nerd or geek himself, like practically every famous Internet-savvy scientist I’ve ever heard of.(Physicists know their Star Trek, biologists their Cthulhu myths, astronomers their Dr. Who.) But still, I found his digressions into general physics at times overlong, but I’ve read Atom and quite a lot of books on physics, and much of this was simply too familiar.

However, it was entertaining, and often funny. But the real fun starts if you are actually able to recall the teeming multitudes of episodes from Star Trek, Star Trek: The Next Generation, Deep Space Nine, Voyager, and, of course, the movies, all of which he quotes from enthusiastically and to great effect. It’s amazing, actually, how often the Star Trek people got their physics right, or at least stayed within the realm of the improbable without crossing over into the outright impossible. With the transporter system as the one major exception, though; and it is especially entertaining to follow Krauss when he scrupulously dissects all the various possibilities how the transporter might be made to work if it had to obey the laws of physics. The Star Trek people, mind, know that very well; as Krauss relates, when the franchise’s “chief engineer” Michael Okuda was asked in an interview how the transporter’s “Heisenberg compensators” work, he merely replied, “Very well, thank you!”

There’s one major blunder in this book, it should be added, and that isn’t Krauss’s but—of all people—Steven Weinberg’s! Luckily, it’s got nothing to do with physics (and I’m not completely serious here either, of course). When asked by Krauss for (physics) bloopers from the Star Trek franchise, Weinberg replied that the main mistake made on Star Trek “is to split an infinitive every damn time: To boldly go.” With which Weinberg is, of course, in utter disagreement with everybody from the Chicago Manual of Style to the Oxford English Dictionary. Seemingly marooned in English Grammar II: The Wrath of Strunk & White, there might be hope for Weinberg in English Grammar III: The Search for Geoffrey Pullum ;-)
  gyokusai | Oct 19, 2008 |
Space sciences/Video games/Star Trek (Television program)
  Budz888 | May 31, 2008 |
Very entertaining, popular science book. If you like space travel, science fiction, science etc. this is for you! ( )
  yapete | May 31, 2008 |
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Epigraph
"But I canna change the laws of physics, Captain!"
(Scotty, to Kirk, innumerable times)
Dedication
To my family
First words
You are at the helm of the starship Defiant (NCC-1764), currently in orbit around the planet Iconia, near the Neutral Zone.
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(Click to show. Warning: May contain spoilers.)
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File:ThePhysicsofStarTrek.jpg

Lawrence M. Krauss

Physics and Star Trek

Star Trek

The Physics of Star Trek

Book description

Amazon.com (ISBN 0060977108, Paperback)

Sure, we all know Star Trek is fiction, but warp drives and transporters and holodecks don't seem altogether implausible. Are any of these futuristic inventions fundamentally outlawed by physics as we understand it today? The Physics of Star Trek takes a lighthearted look at this subject, speculating on how the wonders of Star Trek technology might actually work--and, in some cases, revealing why the inventions are impossible or impractical even for an advanced civilization. (Example: "dematerializing" a person for transport would require about as much energy as is released by a 100-megaton hydrogen bomb). The Physics of Star Trek deserves merit for providing a refresher course on topics such as relativity and antimatter, but let's face it: the reason most people will want to read this book is simply that it's fun to poke holes in the premises of their favorite science fiction shows!

(retrieved from Amazon Fri, 24 Apr 2009 07:58:25 -0400)

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