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Putting Star Wars to the MythBusters Test

DangerTenor writes "The cast of the show MythBusters chat about their pasts with ILM, talk about some Star Wars myths (Can you avoid freezing to death in a blizzard overnight by gutting a dead animal like a tauntaun and getting into its carcass?) and why R2-D2 is the perfect sidekick." Not as cool as our interview, but pretty neat.

22 of 386 comments (clear)

  1. That Tauntaun thing... by cnelzie · · Score: 5, Informative

    ...wasn't how they survived the entire evening. It was just to keep Luke warm while Han built the shelter... Geeze.

        (Yeah, I am a Star Wars Geek.)

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    1. Re:That Tauntaun thing... by IAAP · · Score: 5, Funny
      Afterall there's no chance they'll kill some animal in some cold place and put one of their interns in it over night. That would be pretty cruel taking into account that it's just done "to be sure"...

      You mean would be cruel to the animal. The intern, on the other hand, well, they're interns!

    2. Re:That Tauntaun thing... by ArsonSmith · · Score: 5, Informative

      As someone who grew up hunting and skinned many a deer and elk I can say that the insides will stay rather warm for quite some time. While bow hunting you often have to track an animal the next morning because a bow wont kill it right away. While I think Hoth was suppose to be something like -60 or more I know that an Elk will hold heat for well over 12 hours in 0-10degree weather.

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    3. Re:That Tauntaun thing... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

      "While bow hunting you often have to track an animal the next morning because a bow wont kill it right away.

      That's why experienced hunters let the ARROW do the killing.

  2. The Real Myth by Shadow+Wrought · · Score: 5, Funny

    Does talking backward smarter make you sound? Hmmmmm?

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    1. Re:The Real Myth by haluness · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Just an interesting point, Yoda's form of speech actually belongs to a class of languages termed OSV (Object Subject Verb) whereas English is VSO (Verb Subject Object).

      In fact there are real human languages that have OSV order.

      More info at ahref=http://www.akerbeltz.org/beagangaidhlig/gram ar/grammar_VSO.htmrel=url2html-20202http://www.ake rbeltz.org/beagangaidhlig/gramar/grammar_VSO.htm> and http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Word_order

    2. Re:The Real Myth by MutantHamster · · Score: 5, Informative
      "English is VSO (Verb Subject Object)."

      No, is not English VSO. Is English SVO. Sound VSO languages retarded.

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  3. Deathstar by damonlab · · Score: 5, Funny

    Does the Deathstar run Linux?

    1. Re:Deathstar by Frequency+Domain · · Score: 5, Funny
      Does the Deathstar run Linux?
      No, but if the rebels had only had an Apple laptop they could have uploaded a virus and bypassed that whole shoot down the cooling vent thing.
    2. Re:Deathstar by goldenorfe · · Score: 5, Funny

      The death star runs Gentoo, which is why they were behind schedule building it.

    3. Re:Deathstar by interstellar_donkey · · Score: 5, Funny

      I always thought it ran VMS.

      I don't have a good reason. It just seems like that's what the Empire would use.

      --
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  4. Re:Starwars and the crew by dr_dank · · Score: 5, Funny

    Practical jokes? I'm thinking the SW angle is an excuse to get Kari into a slave Leia outfit.

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  5. Talk like this, I do by everphilski · · Score: 5, Funny

    because third grade english, pass I did not.

  6. The only good wars... by truthsearch · · Score: 5, Funny

    "Ladies and gentlemen, boys and girls. Contrary to what you've just seen, war is neither glamorous nor fun. There are no winners, only losers. There are no good wars, with the following exceptions: The American Revolution, World War II, and the Star Wars Trilogy. If you'd like to learn more about war, there's lots of books in your local library, many of them with cool, gory pictures." -- Bart Simpson

  7. A 50 footer? by Otter · · Score: 5, Informative
    Could you survive a 50-foot fall into a snow bank like Luke Skywalker did?

    Huh? Jamie Pierre just broke the skiing cliff-drop record with a 245-footer in Grand Targhee. I haven't seen the video yet, but supposedly he didn't even land it cleanly. (The New Zealander who previously held the record hit a 225-footer into slush, landing on his back with a backpack full of foam.)

    C'mon, a 50-footer won't even get you into a movie nowadays unless you throw at least a 720...

  8. The lightsaber myth... by Vexler · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Can a weapon like a lightsaber actually exist?

    Even the most uninformed fan knows that it's not just the light, but it's plasma being shaped into a cylindrical shape approximately 1 meter in length (according to the Episode III novel) that gives the lightsaber its power. (Yes, and the Force, but let me just talk about the saber for the moment...)

    One of the problem has to do with the state of the plasma, often called the fourth state of matter. It is by no means solid, and yet the fact that the lightsaber has a distinct shape when activated and the fact that two lightsabers can clash in a duel mean that there is a solid-like boundary to the blade that is inviolable. On the contrary, often we see the blade cutting through other objects and body parts with frightening ease. (Just ask Count Dooku.)

    Which brings me to another issue: The power required to confine the plasma in a blade-like configuration (be it magnetic or otherwise) may well exceed the power to generate the blade in the first place. It seems almost redundant for a weapon of this type to be built, as the builder can control and direct the flow of plasma with a device no more than 30 centimeters in length. As someone else said regarding construction of Dyson Spheres, "If you can build it, you don't need it."

    1. Re:The lightsaber myth... by SETIGuy · · Score: 5, Informative
      Even the most uninformed fan knows that it's not just the light, but it's plasma being shaped into a cylindrical shape approximately 1 meter in length (according to the Episode III novel) that gives the lightsaber its power. (Yes, and the Force, but let me just talk about the saber for the moment...)

      I have a device that is very much like a light saber that uses no power at all. It consists of a thermal electron plasma which is contained by a matrix of positively charged ions. I can't get it to glow like a "light saber" unless I supply a lot of energy to it, but doing so weakens the ion matrix to the point where it might fail to stand up use.

      Electrostatic repulsion and the strength of the ion matrix prevent it from penetrating another saber of similar design, but the same electrostatic repulsion, when focused to specific parts of the blade, is quite adept at slicing through flesh.

      There is a picture of a saber of the type I describe right here.

  9. Don't read if you love Star Wars by Microsift · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I'm going to ruin it for you... In episode IV, the Storm Troopers set their blasters for stun and fill the room up with blaster energy (it was represented as concentric circles), and capture Princess Leia. Why on Earth wasn't this the default setting? Much is made in the movies about the Jedi's ability to block blaster fire with their light sabers, (and in Vader's case his hand). It seems like the obvious tactic against a Jedi is set for stun, knock the Jedi out, set for kill, kill the Jedi. No muss, no fuss. But they never do this...

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  10. Real myth needs busting by squidfood · · Score: 5, Funny
    Given the angle of attack, exit wound, etc., did Han shoot first?

    (Personally I suspect some post-Imperial propagandist doctored the data).

  11. Re:Water cores by pclminion · · Score: 5, Interesting
    But I thought that solid water (ice) was less dense then the liquid form. Therefore, if you compress water enough, it cannot turn into a solid.

    There are twelve known physical types of ice. Look at the phase diagram carefully. Even at 10,000 gigapascals there are forms of ice. Most of these types are denser than water. What we typically think of as "water ice" is specifically called Ice-1 (there are two subtypes, cubic and hexagonal). Ice-2 through Ice-10 are all denser than water, with Ice-10 being 2.5 times as dense. That's some heavy ice. Ice-11 is less dense than water, but Ice-12 is again denser.

    Our observations of water here on earth are not really representative of all the forms of H2O in nature. On the contrary, a big part of the reason why life is able to exist on this planet is that we are almost exactly at the triple point of water. By the weak anthropic principle, we only observe those forms of water that are conducive to the existence of life.

  12. Re:nice try, but faulty. by Penguinshit · · Score: 5, Funny


    I find your lack of faith disturbing...

  13. Ok.. let's get serious now... by jbuilder · · Score: 5, Funny

    Do ANY of the myths they debunk involve Kari wearing that bronze bikini princess leia wore in Ep 6? If not then I really don't see the point in any further discussion.

    And if any of the discussion DOES involve that bikini for GOD sake please take pictures!

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