The Singularity Of A Romulan Warbird

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  • čas přidán 30. 07. 2024
  • The Romulans have their own way of doing things and that includes their form of powering interstellar travel.
    Unlike Starfleet that uses matter-antimatter reactions, they decided to use a singularity core. But how does it work and why do they choose this over the most common options?
    Music from bensound.com, purple-planet.com and freesfx.co.uk
    Star Trek Online developed by Cryptic Studios and Perfect World.
    Star Trek, Star Trek Enterprise/Voyager/Deep Space Nine/Discovery/Picard and The Next Generation are all owned and distributed by CBS.
    Star Trek Films are owned and distributed by Paramount Pictures
    This Video is for critical purposes with commentary.
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Komentáře • 767

  • @KatrinaLeFaye
    @KatrinaLeFaye Před 4 lety +537

    The implosion would also very much fit with the Romulan secrecy, you can't study our tech even in defeat!

    • @paulgrattan3885
      @paulgrattan3885 Před 4 lety +62

      It's how during the Human/Romulan war of the 22nd century no Romulan ships and their crews were ever captured. If defeated and on the verge of being boarded by Starfleet the Romulan Commander would simply collapse his/her ships core self destruction. There would be nothing to recover. Hence why nobody knew what Romulans looked like until the mid 23rd century.

    • @DrewLSsix
      @DrewLSsix Před 4 lety +10

      @@paulgrattan3885 no, the Romulans didnt have singularity cores in the 22nd century.

    • @paulgrattan3885
      @paulgrattan3885 Před 4 lety +16

      @@DrewLSsix Then how do you explain for the whole war no bodies recovered no technology recovered? Tbh the whole concept of this war from a story perspective is just flawed. This part of canon needs retcons for it to make any sense by the 23rd century.

    • @DrewLSsix
      @DrewLSsix Před 4 lety +10

      @@paulgrattan3885 yeah, the storyline from Balance of Terror has some issues, but any ship capable of interstellar travel is well capable of entirely reducing its organic crew to nothing remotely identifiable. If you assume the Romulans had a no surrender no information doctrine it's not hard to believe that they made sure each ship and crew was prepared to accomplish this.
      As for retcons, those have been made a couple times already, Enterprise did away with the idea that they didnt have visual communication capabilities and the whole nuclear weapons thing. They also did away with the assumption that BoT was the very first time they had experienced cloaking technology.

    • @johnmckenna5782
      @johnmckenna5782 Před 4 lety +3

      @@paulgrattan3885 I disagree with this. I do not think that the romulans had artificial black hole tech at that time. One of the reasons Earth was able to win as I understand it was they had mastered mater-antimatter power on their ships, which meant more power which gave them an advantage over romulan fusion reactor powered ships.

  • @archades115
    @archades115 Před 4 lety +93

    Romulans, the dark elves of the Star Trek universe. Awesome!

  • @Sireannon
    @Sireannon Před 4 lety +83

    Always was fascinated with their singularity drive

    • @tonywhite9873
      @tonywhite9873 Před 4 lety +3

      Yes, They fly these things near Planets and stars, I always worried if they land these things.

    • @retluoc
      @retluoc Před 3 lety

      I have as well. Just like cold fusion, I can't figure out how they could form one, stabilize it, and get an energy surplus.
      I would think almost all the energy would have to be used for containment.

    • @LloydWaldo
      @LloydWaldo Před 3 lety +5

      @@retluoc in a Schwartzfield kugolblitz, by definition it will always output more energy in Hawking radiation than it does through tidal force, so there will always be a surplus of energy coming from the singularity.
      In fact as the singularity approaches zero mass, the output of surplus energy approaches 100%. You would start with a black hole composed of photons with a mass of a couple of million tons, but the energy needed to contain it would always be less than the total energy it can output.
      By the way it also doesn’t matter if you bring it close to another object. If the containment were breached, it would simply convert itself to energy faster and evaporate. Because it would be radiating more energy than gravity at this point, the singularity cannot grow. It can only shrink. Since the actual size of the event horizon is so small (ie: 1x10^-15m) there is no way to introduce more mass into the black hole without the black hole pushing that mass away with Hawking radiation. You could place the black hole in a block of solid lead, but it wouldn’t matter because the gravity pulling the container in is less powerful than the radiation pushing it away.
      Sort of counterintuitive, but basically at a certain size, a black hole can only shrink and never grow.

  • @d.m.515
    @d.m.515 Před 4 lety +86

    You’d think borg spheres would have black hole reactors, just by nature of their.... geometry.

    • @Blynat
      @Blynat Před 3 lety +10

      The Borg use the Quantum Slip Stream Networks. that's why they can catch up to a Star Fleet flagship at maximum warp.

    • @itsme-zt7fc
      @itsme-zt7fc Před 3 lety +5

      @@Blynat the borg use conduit drive

    • @marvenlunn6086
      @marvenlunn6086 Před 2 lety

      The Borg just draw there energy from the universe around them

    • @rommdan2716
      @rommdan2716 Před 2 lety

      @@marvenlunn6086 ... So, solar energy?

    • @marvenlunn6086
      @marvenlunn6086 Před 2 lety

      @@rommdan2716 no like the force in star wars

  • @Eradicator-jv9xr
    @Eradicator-jv9xr Před 3 lety +23

    So not only did they make a neat reactor that's different from everyone else, they also made a really good waste disposal system

    • @gmradio2436
      @gmradio2436 Před rokem +4

      Great way to hide bodies. Very Tal Shiar. Cause of death "Singularity Accident" must be common.

  • @CharlesUrban
    @CharlesUrban Před 4 lety +242

    The singularity lends itself to the Romulans' sneaky ways. If the core goes critical, the ship gets sucked into the black hole. Should the ship be destroyed during a covert mission, there's no physical evidence!

    • @brothersgt.grauwolff6716
      @brothersgt.grauwolff6716 Před 4 lety +28

      as well as any enemy ships that happen to be to close no witnesses 😉

    • @Freddie1980
      @Freddie1980 Před 4 lety +5

      Except that you have a black hole appear out of know where. Once detected it will be pretty obvious who was up to no good!

    • @IIGrayfoxII
      @IIGrayfoxII Před 4 lety +5

      Lack of evidence is in itself evidence

    • @jmm1233
      @jmm1233 Před 4 lety +6

      not with these black holes , if the core goes critical the black hole explodes , it a micro-black hole they go pop

    • @rickforrest3638
      @rickforrest3638 Před 4 lety +21

      @@Freddie1980 the microsingularities used by the Romulans are too small to be sustainable without consuming enough mass to grow. Even a dozen ships wouldn't be enough, so it would fade away as well. There would be no trace of anything, aside from perhaps some radiation and ripples in spacetime. I'm not sure how easy those would be to detect.

  • @rvaughan74
    @rvaughan74 Před 4 lety +81

    Assuming Artificial Quantum Singularity is a more verbose term for Kugelblitz the Romulans have traded one explosive situation for another. They no longer have to deal with antimatter explosions as at the correct size a Kugelblitz would only need about a Kilogram of matter added per year to continue generating power just from Hawking Radiation. This also implies a very unpleasant means of executing traitors by using them as fuel.
    The downside to a Kugelblitz is that they do act like black holes meaning that the smaller in mass they are the more energy they put out from Hawking Radiation, including explosive results as the mass melts away by way of the Radiation. This makes the shows explosions for destroyed Romulan ships accurate and STO's implosion inaccurate. Unless the means of destruction in STO happens to add mass to the Kugelblitz to the point of becoming self-sustaining.
    Then again those implosions could be the result of the Commander setting the self-destruct to leave no evidence that the ship was really there.
    Edit: Source for those interested Isaac Arthur's videos on Kugelblitzes.

    • @qohaw_2883
      @qohaw_2883 Před 4 lety +3

      I mean, in STO the black hole rapidly expands, implodes and then explodes again. Perhaps the cores use a regular black hole, but infused with chronitrons for higher energy production rates

    • @3Rayfire
      @3Rayfire Před 4 lety +3

      I'm not sure. An alien species did mistake a Romulan singularity core for a normal black hole at one point and decided to incubate their young their to...ill results. I'd guess it was a standard black hole instead of a radiation black hole.

    • @Meshakhad
      @Meshakhad Před 4 lety +3

      I do like the idea of executing traitors by using them as fuel.

    • @kaitlyn__L
      @kaitlyn__L Před 3 lety +7

      Astrophysicist here, was going to comment that a black hole so small as we're shown would explode, then looked and saw yours :) so the force field is keeping it from exploding, allowing them to siphon away Harking radiation just as other species handle antimatter plasma. In my mind, that's how it is, anyway :D

    • @pwnmeisterage
      @pwnmeisterage Před 3 lety +5

      TNG didn't even have a consistent name for this Romulan power core. "Forced quantum singularity", "artificial singularity", "quantum anomaly", "confined gravitational singularity", etc. It was implied to be far more powerful than Federation matter-antimatter-dilithium counterparts. It was shown to propel Romulan warbirds just as fast as a Galaxy-D but only for short durations because (in their own words) this somehow "depleted" or "burnt out" the power source.

  • @EdricLysharae
    @EdricLysharae Před 3 lety +8

    Federation: "I has a warp core!"
    Romulan Star Empire: "I has a Kugelblitz!"

  • @BjornCanute
    @BjornCanute Před 4 lety +8

    What I love about the idea about this idea is that the hawking radiation given for matter inserted into the black hole would be exactly equivalent to an antimatter-matter annihilation reactor, but without the need for antimatter. So even though this setup is probably more difficult to engineer, the operation time of a Romulan vessel should be basically unlimited, as you can just dump regular matter into the black hole to keep it topped up.

  • @mkohlhorst
    @mkohlhorst Před 4 lety +13

    It'd be nice if the majority of Romulan technology was gravity manipulation based. Gravity Rail Guns (Accelerating a bullet to near light speed), Quantum Singularity Bombs (Implosion on detonation), Gravity Mass Drivers (Throwing asteroids or other large pieces of matter), Space Time Shielding (A form of warp like shielding, incoming damage warped around the ship).

  • @salenstormwing
    @salenstormwing Před 4 lety +87

    Janeway: "It's the wrong way, or the JANE-WAY."
    Romulans: "Hold my Singularity Core!"

  • @Sol-Invictus
    @Sol-Invictus Před 4 lety +15

    It's a kugelblitz power plant. You can make one using lasers concentrated on a tiny spot. At the mass of the empire state building and slightly larger than a proton it would actually be far safer than antimatter. Black holes "evaporate" faster the smaller they are but also release more radiation when smaller. So you'd want one that tiny so it be just big enough to maintain by perfectly lining up protons to feed it. Because at that size it wouldn't capture particles on it's own. It's gravity would just slingshot them around and away.

  • @glennlaroche1524
    @glennlaroche1524 Před 4 lety +147

    "Metal as a veruul" is my new saying. Jolan tru, dude.

    • @chrismc410
      @chrismc410 Před 4 lety +1

      Only a PetaQ would use a black hole for anything, as a Klingon examining Romulan technology would say.

    • @WildBluntHickok
      @WildBluntHickok Před 4 lety +1

      @@chrismc410 Surely even a Klingon would agree that a black hole is at least good for a large scale garbage disposal. I can just imagine a Klingon captain commenting such as he watches an enemy ship fall into a black hole.

    • @Tia-Marie
      @Tia-Marie Před 4 lety +1

      @chrismc410 - Klivam are just afraid of power.

  • @nicholasmorsovillo2752
    @nicholasmorsovillo2752 Před 2 lety +7

    The first time we ever heard about the artificial quantum singularity cores of Romulan ships was in that episode where aliens were using one as a nest and shattered the space/time continuum when the Enterprise came to assist with a power transfer and both crews had to work together to stop it and after the crew of the Warbird was successfully beamed aboard the Enterprise and the beam between both ships was severed the Enterprise then headed to the Romulan Neutral Zone to take the crew home.

  • @GraceSerenityK
    @GraceSerenityK Před 4 lety +76

    "How did I write that without any full stops?" Rick, you come up with the funniest throw-away lines!

  • @sodadrinker89
    @sodadrinker89 Před 4 lety +18

    That Dune theme.

  • @brothersgt.grauwolff6716
    @brothersgt.grauwolff6716 Před 4 lety +74

    "We who March under the Raptors Wing!"

  • @JLanc1982
    @JLanc1982 Před 4 lety +74

    The Event horizons core looks similar! Except you don’t get sent to hell!

    • @MrGoatflakes
      @MrGoatflakes Před 4 lety +18

      They do, but Romulans have described the experience as "relaxing"...

    • @Paradisio84
      @Paradisio84 Před 4 lety +1

      Lol!

    • @Nemoticon
      @Nemoticon Před 4 lety +7

      "Libera te tutemet ex inferis"

    • @thesinfultictac5704
      @thesinfultictac5704 Před 4 lety +14

      "sometimes when I sit in my bunk in the quiet I can hear the screams of our ancestors on Vulcan"
      "Have you been looking into the engine core again?"
      "Yes,why?"

    • @manictiger
      @manictiger Před 4 lety +6

      Praise Slaanesh!!! Oh wait, wrong franchise.

  • @still_guns
    @still_guns Před 4 lety +2

    The Voyager episode Hunters features a relay station powered by a contained artificial singularity. The crew acts like it's never been done before, like this is the first time it's been discovered, yet here tare the Romulan's doing it everyday.
    Maybe I'm missing something here.

    • @muninrob
      @muninrob Před 4 lety +1

      Janeway failed all her academic courses at Star Fleet Academy.

    • @dboymax1
      @dboymax1 Před 4 lety +1

      The relay station reactors used could be of a type far superior technologically to the Romulan version...

  • @bartlester1221
    @bartlester1221 Před 4 lety +9

    I really love the romulans and there tech and nice touch on useing theam music from dune

  • @1234kalmar
    @1234kalmar Před 4 lety +13

    Hooo, boi, is it a chore to grind for warbirds. :D Brings to mind that 16 tons song from Tenessie Ernie Ford

  • @ky7299
    @ky7299 Před 4 lety +2

    I think that if you allow a kugelblitz (artificial micro black hole) to deplete itself, the Hawking radiation being inversely proportional to its event horizon size you would expect an immense explosion rather than a gravitational implosion. The effect would be similar to an antimatter explosion.

    • @hanelyp1
      @hanelyp1 Před 4 lety

      Depending on the mass of the singularity in the operating drive, could be years before that explosion.

  • @antwan1357
    @antwan1357 Před 4 lety +26

    On Star Trek Online the singularity drive is a massive moving sphere that has many moving parts. The Romulans have unlimited energy at least in terms of human lifespans

    • @zoneofendless.
      @zoneofendless. Před 4 lety +1

      sometimes I just stare at the cores for hours on end, not even really playing the game, and just contimplate.

    • @pwnmeisterage
      @pwnmeisterage Před 3 lety +3

      Interesting comment. Because Romulans are usually described as somehow being resource-poor. They're driven by efficiency, maximizing use and usefulness from scarcity, they're used to sacrifice and deprivation. In TNG, they're fixated on the idea of obtaining an "ultimate" energy source (compare vs Klingon fixation on an "ultimate" weapon, Federation fixation on an "ultimate" knowledge archive, etc). It all seems a bit redundant if they already have unlimited energy at their disposal.

    • @Gardstyle35
      @Gardstyle35 Před 3 lety +2

      @@pwnmeisterage the cardassians are ressource poor, the klingons are - every power is but the federation cause reasons...

  •  Před 4 lety +3

    Romulans are my favourite Star Trek species as well. My main in Star Trek Online is also a Romulan. It’s cool that some warbirds in STO, such as the Surhuelh class have such a large singularity, they are visible from the outside.

  • @adamwilder2943
    @adamwilder2943 Před 4 lety +1

    Thanks Rick sir, as I always enjoy these videos; in facts, I have found great enjoyment with all the videos on your channel, since I have been subscribed to you.

  • @benjaminconnor6640
    @benjaminconnor6640 Před 4 lety +51

    If by "dissipates" you mean a nuclear explosion of unparalleled proportion, then yes there would be an explosion, instead of collapsing inward towards the reactor.

    • @theodorevictor774
      @theodorevictor774 Před 4 lety +5

      Mini blackholes have a limit to what they can eat.theory is matter is fed into said blackhole and converts into rotational energy.the gravity plaiting then blead that energy ie harvesting it into a energy wave which is used for warp narcelles and energy output.This explains limits to the warbird spead and energy output.A breach or the singualarity takes matter in to fast will result in a unblaced rotation spin witch will tear the the ship apart by conerting it into erergy or a very big bang.This in star trek will look like a ship sucked into a point which flashes into a plasma ball of energy (booom big booooooooooom) or the ship twisted lug a wet rung cloth before said bang(boooooooom).

    • @paulgrattan3885
      @paulgrattan3885 Před 4 lety +2

      But we saw in Voyager a contained micro black hole pull into itself an entire space array and three vessels so I don't believe size of the singularity is a factor (in Star Trek anyway). I'm sure Chakotay says the singularity inside the Hirogen array is only a few centimetres across.

    • @DrewLSsix
      @DrewLSsix Před 4 lety +17

      @@paulgrattan3885 that's because star trek does and always has had an abusive relationship with science. it says it loves science, gets science all liquored up while showering it with compliments. Then when science is unable to think clearly or act in self defense Star trek shoves it into the back of its windowless van and spends the rest of the night thinking up creative and perverse ways of violating science.

    • @adaeptzulander2928
      @adaeptzulander2928 Před 4 lety

      @@es4583 I figure the Romulans consume asteroids and "dead" planets or even dwarf stars to gather the mass needed to create a black hole.

    • @laughingalex7563
      @laughingalex7563 Před 4 lety +1

      I get a feeling the singularities are much smaller than 1cm, but not so small to instantly evaporate. A few thoughts though. Star trek online portrays Rom ships as simply being crushed by there own black hole. Not sure thatd actually happen, given the singularity itself explodes. More likely it'd explode halfway during the ships collapse. Not sure why the romulans wouldnt make a black home that evaporated faster.

  • @thelync228
    @thelync228 Před 4 lety +4

    Love your content as always

  • @bdr420i
    @bdr420i Před 2 lety +2

    The fact that the writers included this technology is fascinating

  • @enoughothis
    @enoughothis Před 4 lety +17

    Romulans are the best. Their ships and tech are so cool. One theory about why they use forced singularity technology rather than standard Matter/Antimatter is that the standard reactor may not be enough to power their cloaks, which are more advanced then the Klingon versions.

    • @SantomPh
      @SantomPh Před 4 lety

      they do use that tech to power all their weapons and technology, but it is also out of their arrogance and desire to stand out. This is why the Vulcans do not use this technology.
      The Romulans are also a major Beta rather than Alpha Quadrant power so some other races there might also use the tech as standard.

    • @jamie210690
      @jamie210690 Před 4 lety

      So more advamced but less energy efficient? Does it help them hide better?

    • @enoughothis
      @enoughothis Před 4 lety +1

      @@jamie210690, because more power. I remember reading that the singularity must be carefully calibrated while the cloak is active to avoid emitting tachyons.

    • @jamie210690
      @jamie210690 Před 4 lety +1

      @@enoughothis Thank you. I think the tachyons are how data found the cloaked romulan ships in that episode I cant think of the name of roght now :p

    • @simonwinn8757
      @simonwinn8757 Před 4 lety

      Vulcans suffer from their logic and the lack of risk taking. If something deemed as the most logic way, they won't go against this and follow it. Vulcans took over a century to go from warp 1 to warp 2.

  • @Iceflkn
    @Iceflkn Před 4 lety +1

    An accelerator would FINALLY explain the ship bowed, open center shape for the ship. Maybe not a perfect circle but still able to fit in. Well done!

  • @maeliandrade9919
    @maeliandrade9919 Před 4 lety

    The titles of your videos are the best ones! Imaginative and not at all obvious

  • @mikeyjames1000
    @mikeyjames1000 Před 4 lety +15

    Intelligent like a Vulcan and battle hard like a Klingon a very formidable species 🖖🏼

    • @tenrec
      @tenrec Před 4 lety

      But prone to unparalleled levels of fashion disasters, such as shoulder pads with the wingspan of a B-52.

    • @seand.g423
      @seand.g423 Před 4 lety

      @@tenrec more like a Sharlin, but more importantly... that _fucking_ bowl cut!

    • @BlackOmegaWorks
      @BlackOmegaWorks Před 4 lety

      @@tenrec still light years more fashionable than a federation skant.

    • @zerog5109
      @zerog5109 Před 4 lety

      A Romulan would instantly crumble after the first two pain sticks during a Klingon Rite of Ascension.

    • @qawamity
      @qawamity Před 3 lety

      And trustworthy like a Ferengi.

  • @kallistnemain2343
    @kallistnemain2343 Před 4 lety

    Just wanted to let you know that you have pulled me back in to Star Trek Online. Been loving your videos and every time I saw a scene from the game, I was impressed by how much it had changed from when I played year 2. Of course none of that would have happened if your video's weren't incredibly entertaining.

  • @casbot71
    @casbot71 Před 4 lety +13

    A Romulan ship would be perfect for *long range exploration* - no fuel needed and can cloak whenever there are hostiles.
    If one had been pulled into the Delta Quadrant it would've had an easier time than any Starfleet ship.
    The only issue is the crew just couldn't get along with any other species since they are well… arrogant backstabbing pricks. And any telepaths or super races wouldn't tolerate them.
    But a Romulan ship could well be on its way back from the Delta Quadrant (slowly) and having no real drama as they avoid any hostile force. And the journey is within the Romulan lifespan.
    Of course they would have less _adventures._
    [And if they managed to make a deal on that weapons planet that Seven of Nine and the Doctor stuffed up … … ]
    In fact there is a *exploration version of the D'deridex Warbird* in a official supplement on the Romulans for (I think) a RPG.
    But the exploration branch never got much attention, their job was to discover new civilizations and work out how to subvert them, not pure exploration.
    As for the Quantum singularly, the same supplement said that they were created in large space stations with a massive energy surplus, and were forced into being already inside a containment field. The whole setup was then moved into the Warbird.
    And the stations were situated away from anything else in case of "oops".
    There were plans for a TV series, drawn up post Nemesis (but when that flopped…) that was to be set in the year 3000 with a tired Federation that was slowly falling apart. In it the new Enterprise was supposed to have a *quantum singularity drive* - and quantum Slipstream and a cloak (quantum status unknown).
    Vulcan and Romulus having been reunified centuries before.
    But instead they went the prequel route with _Enterprise._

    • @WildBluntHickok
      @WildBluntHickok Před 4 lety +1

      Would've been a mistake. I don't think most fans want a series set after Voyager that's a century or more ahead. Give us a couple of years later, or a decade, or 20 years. But still same era.
      Then again, if it's a good enough story they could probably get away with any bad choices in other areas (maybe not bad casting for the entire crew).

  • @thomashill6347
    @thomashill6347 Před 4 lety

    Thanks for the insightful video on the cool Romulan Warbird , The race that has assume ship design.

  • @jeffhallam2004
    @jeffhallam2004 Před 4 lety +5

    I love the Romulus too!

    • @slewone4905
      @slewone4905 Před 4 lety

      Yeah. I hate Klingons. They are just space Jocks.

    • @michaelgreenwood3413
      @michaelgreenwood3413 Před 2 lety

      @@slewone4905 Eh, that's more Hirogen. Klingons are the Drama Club.

  • @robmckee5295
    @robmckee5295 Před 4 lety +1

    I like the 1984 Dune music in the background. Maybe Starfleet will encounter a species the uses a Holtzman drive. Thanks for the video.

    • @SantomPh
      @SantomPh Před 4 lety

      and get themselves stuck in stars and planetary matter like the Pegasus😂

  • @scifinerd1911
    @scifinerd1911 Před 4 lety

    What a great video thank you

  • @AmericaChat
    @AmericaChat Před 4 lety +1

    That might explain a Voyager episode. The one with the micro black hole and Romulin science ship from the past.

    • @SWIFTO_SCYTHE
      @SWIFTO_SCYTHE Před 4 lety +1

      And the episode where Picard Troi and Data can try to reverse a warp corp breech and those aliens just wanted to save their babies in the fake singularity

  • @retluoc
    @retluoc Před 4 lety +117

    Going into hyperspace ain't like dusting crops, kid. Oops, wrong genre 😉

    • @CharlesUrban
      @CharlesUrban Před 4 lety +9

      Oh, but it is now! "Let's go HYPERSPACE SKIPPING, kids! It's suddenly _not_ completely suicidal, because J.J. Abrams has to hide his terrible writing by making everything go at breakneck speed with no stopping whatsoever! WHEEEEE!"

    • @Captain_Brown_Beard
      @Captain_Brown_Beard Před 4 lety +2

      I dont think star wars ship can turn on a dime either. They only have rear thrust unless landing so they gotta come about and cant just turn around instantly like trek ships. Its more fantasy tech, but I like it

    • @retluoc
      @retluoc Před 4 lety +4

      Yep, although both are purley fantasy, Star Trek uses a more "realistic" technology than Star Wars. Hyperdrive is much much faster than warp, but it involves...bah, I won't geek out here but both FTL theories are online. But for us humans, we'll probably invent warp before hyperdrive.

    • @musicalhistory4392
      @musicalhistory4392 Před 4 lety +2

      @@retluoc Hyperdrive has very little on screen science behind it considering Star Wars has been mostly war focused, beyond the fact that fuel reserves do deplete and are hard to obtain (thanks Disney for making a movie each about these). Star Trek being a much more exploratory, and in such science based franchise, has put real scientific theories into it's made up formula.

    • @retluoc
      @retluoc Před 4 lety +3

      I want to invent warp drive. You know why? Dollar signs, so I can retire on an island full of...naked ladies.😀. I don't even like to fly -- I take trains. (Now I want to see that movie again). James Cromwell did a great job.

  • @BloodAcidPro
    @BloodAcidPro Před 4 lety +8

    More likely they use singularity so the ship dont became easily obtainable. Imagine the romulan ships as giant evidence lockers.

  • @theColJessep
    @theColJessep Před 4 lety +2

    For anybody interested in the actual physics background behind this idea, google "Kugelblitz drive". And it does not implode if containment fails. I don't think the Star Trek authors really understood how it would work or what the limitations are. The smaller the black hole of the Kugelblitz drive, the more energy it will lose as Hawking radiation. Imagine a very small star that gets brighter exponentially and explodes quite violently before it vanishes completely. And this would not happen "if containment fails" but if you don't feed it enough.
    It's a kind of black hole that doesn't "suck in" matter. The challenge would actually be to get enough matter per time into the micro black hole to keep it stable and generate energy.
    Then there is the inertia of the mass of the black hole you need to overcome but I guess you can "magic" that problem away with "inertial dampeners". I'll stop now before I get a headache... =)

  • @TR-ot1dn
    @TR-ot1dn Před 4 lety +19

    I have a Romulan as my main, and I have the Valkis Temporal Heavy Dreadnought as my flagship. That puppy is powered by a literal black hole the size of a Walmart 😮. When I got it, whoo did I fangirl all over the place🤣.

    • @brothersgt.grauwolff6716
      @brothersgt.grauwolff6716 Před 4 lety +1

      Nice 😍 Romulan main myself 😊

    • @justinfrazier9555
      @justinfrazier9555 Před 4 lety +1

      I bet my Kholhr could sit right behind your big bastard and blow it to pieces xD I ran big ships until I learned what pilot roll (invincibility until finished), running into the shields, and blasting with 4 sets of heavy cannons and torps annihilate them from the back where they usually use phasers or 360 degree cannons and stay out of the front where they keep the heavy hitters and just out turn them until they die. Running a beam boat? Even easier lol

  • @josephmitchelljr.4354
    @josephmitchelljr.4354 Před 4 lety

    Cool did not know this Thanks

  • @dustyprater7884
    @dustyprater7884 Před 4 lety +3

    Great Video!! Perhaps another reason the Romulans use a Forced Quantum Singularity is because it's relatively cheaper then the Matter-Antimatter Reactors and it helps maintain the status quo.
    It is likely that their ships don't need Dilithium, as they could already be bending space-time. Which helps bolster the Romulan ideals of Superiority and Self Reliance. Just a point to ponder. Keep up the good work sir!!!😁

  • @gary24fan
    @gary24fan Před 3 lety

    That Romulan warp drive looks like some kinda funky ride at the carnival.

  • @jonsquare1248
    @jonsquare1248 Před 3 lety +2

    My theory is that the Romulans use the forced quantum singularity just so that they are not reliant on Dilithium for their engines. Unlike their Alpha quadrant adversaries. Not having that weakness is an advantage. If and when Romulus went to war with the rest of the Alpha quadrant, they could just destroy all sources of Dilithium and destroy the ability for anyone else besides them to travel at FTL speeds.

    • @DavidCrow
      @DavidCrow Před rokem

      Like a sort of "burn"? Hmm, seems to be a little black hole in the plot, eh?

  • @awesomemccoolname7111
    @awesomemccoolname7111 Před 4 lety

    The jolan tru bit was a nice touch. +1

  • @TheGuardianofAzarath
    @TheGuardianofAzarath Před 3 lety +1

    We also never saw Romulan ships imploding in DS9 either, you can bet the Dominion were able to learn the secrets of romulan tech. And we know the Borg have assimilated romulan ships, yet they never found a use for that tech? Or cloaking devices? I guess the borg just never considered stealth a relevant tactic. I remember talking to my GCSE physics teacher back when i was about 16 or so, and i was talking to him about this topic, and he was like "What are you talking about?" and he called himself a trekkie. *shakes head*

  • @sithsoldier98
    @sithsoldier98 Před 4 lety

    Fascinating....

  • @thomasestes5747
    @thomasestes5747 Před 2 lety

    You know as somebody who watches Star Trek discovery in season 3 after "The Burn" was explained my very first thought was "the Romulans must love this. Also, they did it."

  • @CtrlOptDel
    @CtrlOptDel Před 4 lety +3

    I assumed the Romulans came to use singularity cores in their ships - in place of the Vulcan style matter/antimatter power as they presumably used at first - after coming across one of the communication relays in the grid that extended from the beta to delta quadrants (as claimed by the Hirogen & used to send the Voyager EMH to the Prometheus) & adapted that technology to their own uses.

  • @TonksMoriarty
    @TonksMoriarty Před 4 lety +20

    Romulans: Warp Hipsters!

  • @Strato13
    @Strato13 Před 4 lety

    The background music is the best part of the video 👍

  • @robertmoore6149
    @robertmoore6149 Před 4 lety +3

    The canon rational was always that Romulans dont have access to significant amounts of dilithium. So they used power cells in TOS and this artificial black hole tech in TNG and later.

    • @michaelgreenwood3413
      @michaelgreenwood3413 Před 2 lety

      That said, Canonically they do need Dil, just only to actually start the singularity, rather than maintain it.

    • @glitterboy2098
      @glitterboy2098 Před 2 lety

      @@michaelgreenwood3413 that may not be entirely the case now, as Prodigy introduces a very similar system in the Protocore, which contains a small protostar inside a containment system. the ship requires two high end M/AM warp cores to power the containment systems to keep the contents of the protocore from consuming the ship with its gravity, in addition to powering the ships nromal warp drive and systems.
      as a micro black hole is an even more potent object than a star, it seems likely that romulan singularity cores do require M/AM warp cores of some kind to power the containment systems. however since the romulans are not trying to power a superfast warp drive like the protocore is, they could probably get by with much less powerful warp cores used mainly to power the containment and act as backup power, which would make the singularity core system much more efficient in terms of antimatter and dilithium use.

  • @anthonygorman94
    @anthonygorman94 Před 3 lety

    The Romulan's tech and Ship designs are my favorite aesthetic too! My highest level STO character is a romulan, for those sweet majestic ships!

  • @KalijahAnderson
    @KalijahAnderson Před 4 lety +2

    "Nah, to tame."
    Loses it.

  • @PMW3
    @PMW3 Před 4 lety +3

    Romulan Scientist 1: Should we just have antimatter and matter reactors?
    Romulan Scientist 2: Nah, not enough technobabble

  • @noahschneider400
    @noahschneider400 Před 4 lety +1

    the jolan tru was a nice touch

  • @goodcuppatea
    @goodcuppatea Před 4 lety +1

    That greeting made my day. Thank you! This was a comment.

    • @elmajore4818
      @elmajore4818 Před 3 lety

      Spezifisch nehme ich an heißer Grauer Graf? This is a follow-up comment (in German).

  • @danehutchins3845
    @danehutchins3845 Před 4 lety

    Hi Rick... And yes it is a video. Thanks for the honesty.

  • @chryssmetzler2098
    @chryssmetzler2098 Před 4 lety +1

    A warbird goes full event horizon. Goes to a hell dimension and comes back possessed.

  • @thesageofgames1871
    @thesageofgames1871 Před 4 lety +1

    I like that intro "Hi, I'm Rick and this is a video."

  • @hakont.4960
    @hakont.4960 Před 4 lety +2

    The "interstellar Extended" mod for KSP has something similar to this, a reactor powered by a tiny artificial black hole. It has a power output of 160 gigawatts and is about as big as a bus, so it has a pretty impressive power to weight ratio to put it mildly.

    • @1014p
      @1014p Před rokem

      Could power many cities with that. Until some idiot with a cause sabotages it and a city vanishes.

  • @josephcontreras8930
    @josephcontreras8930 Před 4 lety +1

    I'd love to see a grudge match between klingons and vulcans or romulans where Vulcans go berserker mode and take them on. Oh and have it in a STEEL CAGE on a Sunday Sunday Sunday. Get your tix now or listen for your chance to win 2 free tix on the radio...

  • @johnnyscifi
    @johnnyscifi Před 4 lety

    Love the D'deridex design!!!

  • @jordanwill7233
    @jordanwill7233 Před 4 lety +1

    I actually had no idea there already was a black hole fueled warp drive. I literally just wrote thirty pages on my own hypothetical.
    Unfortunately, the whole imploding ship thing from a black hole on board doesn’t add up. The most efficient singularities for power output on star trek ships would be microsingularities. These would have a mass of around a couple skyscrapers. This would be comparable to the ship itself, meaning that that mass would not pull the ship and resulting explosion in on itself. The power output would be in the petawatt range (think like millions of thermonuclear power plants) and I could be wrong, but I’m pretty sure they have a lifetime of about 3-4 years before they evaporate - also as they get smaller and smaller, I’m pretty sure their power output increases. These singularities only have a significant pull on material within inches of them. This means that they really can’t consume much material at once. If one escaped containment, it would eat a tiny hole through everything it passed through, but not actually do any severe damage like eating a whole ship. The real danger would be the Hawking radiation - especially as it feeds, even on small amounts of matter - that would irradiate a ship with gamma and x-rays. Still this wouldn’t blow up a ship either.

  • @RWSCOTT
    @RWSCOTT Před 2 lety

    when they showed the engine core in 'Timescape', it had a door like a mailbox that Data just pops open & the singularity's right there... no alarms, shielding, etc. lol

  • @oldtwinsna8347
    @oldtwinsna8347 Před 4 lety +1

    Would be nice they expanded on why they went with gravity wells instead of antimatter. Maybe something to do with historical deficiency in obtaining dilithium in their systems or something to that effect.

  • @IceWolfLoki
    @IceWolfLoki Před 4 lety +1

    One advantage of a Quantum Singularity Power Core rather than Matter/Antimatter Annihilation Power Core is that Dilithium isn't needed to focus/control the reaction. Other races need access to Dilithium in order to generate the power required for more practical warp speeds via Matter/Antimatter Annihilation. Fusion and other power generation commonly referenced in Trek can generally only sustain low warp speeds at least for ships of larger sizes where more warping of space-time would be required. Obviously warp nacelles etc have become more energy efficient as the Star Trek universe has progressed but they still require extreme amounts of power.

    • @3Rayfire
      @3Rayfire Před 4 lety

      Don't be so sure about that. Remember the planet Remus is one giant dilithium mine. I feel like Dilithium is integral for more than just tuning a M/AM plasma stream.

  • @Ozzy_2014
    @Ozzy_2014 Před 4 lety +1

    I'd expect they're creating a kugleblitz black hole! It doesn't use concentrated matter to form but concentrated energy. The science of using such things is very much within the realm of real physics. Or at least current models. In fact such black holes could power and provide gravity for artificial shell worlds even Birch Worlds.

  • @jimskywaker4345
    @jimskywaker4345 Před 4 lety

    I like you time dilation drive idea

  • @srvfan454
    @srvfan454 Před 4 lety +1

    Romulan ships really are works of art.

  • @Gondorian04
    @Gondorian04 Před 4 lety +10

    I have a Hypothetical question, involving a possible "crossover" situation.
    (some little context here) in Mass Effect Biotics are able to create small singularities for a limited time, now hypothetically if an individual from the Mass Effect universe was to end up on a Romulan ship and the Romulan Forced Singularity was shut down for some reason, could the Biotic create a Singularity that would provide sufficient power to the Warbird?
    i have my own opinions on it, but thought it might make for an interesting discussion. :)

    • @KuK137
      @KuK137 Před 4 lety +2

      No. Just no. These can barely move a box, never mind a colossal ship.

    • @Knightwolf1875
      @Knightwolf1875 Před 4 lety +2

      I do think it could be used to kick start the core. Beyond that I don't think they could power a ship.

    • @seand.g423
      @seand.g423 Před 4 lety +3

      @@KuK137 OP wasn't talking about "directly" trying to move the damn ship (let alone from onboard the same ship), but just trying to hold a strong enough Singularity in the housing to keep their situation better than dead in the proverbial water... granted, it would probably take a Matriarch-aged Asari Subject Zero with a fucking daisy chain of impossibly-high-end amps all up and down her spine, plus another one at each joint, but... Beggars and Choosers...

    • @1014p
      @1014p Před rokem

      @@seand.g423I think you missed the point. A Biotic has difficulty moving a box. As in their black hole like power is so small and subtle. It could not be used to run the ships core. Which its power drives its systems to move. No matter your point stands it would take a crazily jacked character modded at unreasonable levels. To the other comment at best a Biotic could jump start a reaction to speed up starting the ships reactor. However it would fail did not stabilize itself.

  • @DreamskyDance
    @DreamskyDance Před 4 lety +2

    hmm.. maybe its kugleblitz black hole.. that way of creating a black hole has the most probability in reality either way ... great video :)

  • @eannamcnamara9338
    @eannamcnamara9338 Před 4 lety

    Fun fact the idea of using balckholes for power is a realistic proposal. The irl version is called a kugelblitz, the can gain power from hawkin radiation or the penrose process. And its rather safe as tiny black holes die of in tiny fractions of a second.

  • @alexc8114
    @alexc8114 Před 4 lety +2

    Ironic, that they could contain black holes in their ships, but not contain one from eating Romulus.

    • @SuMaSLo
      @SuMaSLo Před 4 lety

      *but not contain one in their own system.

  • @doncarlodivargas5497
    @doncarlodivargas5497 Před 4 lety

    when we see those starships, are we inside or outside the warp bubble? if we are outside, how can we see them in the first place? I assume we are inside the bubble, so, how big is actually the bubble? It seems we are some distance away, could they not save a lot of energy by making the bubble smaller?

  • @RaderizDorret
    @RaderizDorret Před 2 lety

    If I ever end up on a ship in Star Trek, I'm gonna be all "This thing runs on WHAT?!!"

  • @cytorakdemon
    @cytorakdemon Před 4 lety

    For the Star Trek stories I'm writing, I was going to have Romulans travel back in time to influence a primitive Earth and lead to the creation of the Roman Empire and I was wracking my brain trying to find a way for the time travel to happen.
    With the insight of the Singularity drives on Warbirds that can cause temporal disruptions and black holes, that actually makes it easier.

  • @PassportBrosBusinessClass

    So basically it’s EVENT HORIZON

  • @ScienceRules118
    @ScienceRules118 Před 4 lety

    One other possibility for how the singularity cores generate power is the use of superradiant scattering - ie., the singularity is spun up as per the Penrose process version, but they then fire some form of electromagnetic radiation, possibly visible light, into the ergosphere of the singularity. This is then bounced off of mirrors on the interior of the core's shell, amplifying the radiation by sending it repeatedly through the ergosphere to collect energy from the rotating singularity, and the excess (ie. the excess compared to the energy initially put into the radiation beam/source) is collected by energy collectors integrated into the outer shell of the singularity core, likely with variable shutters to allow the rate of radiation buildup and collection to avoid causing damage to the collectors or depleting the radiation bouncing around the interior of the shell.

  • @AridosUK
    @AridosUK Před 4 lety +1

    if the core containment was lost and the ship imploded, the infalling matter would generate insane quantities of energy.

  • @mikhailiagacesa3406
    @mikhailiagacesa3406 Před 4 lety +1

    Well done! But the Star Empire ships wouldn't actually implode upon themselves; a "small" black hole dissipates in a runaway Gamma burst. There would be an explosion (much like a warp core) but higher in the EM band. You still would not want to be near it when it happened.

  • @moguldamongrel3054
    @moguldamongrel3054 Před 4 měsíci

    what if they use ramscoops, to inject matter at key angles to create quasi super luminal high speed accretion disks, ( like a natural particle accelerator) that amplifies the energy of ramscooped matter, and harvest that sped up energy. Like if you had a natural whirlpool, and put a hydroelectric generator close to its funnel, to harvest the high speed rotational forces closest to the funnel, instead of pressure/energy to speed up the flow of water. How much energy is generated at that point in space where matter is closest to the black hole without actually dipping into the singularity itself?

  • @jasondavidson1889
    @jasondavidson1889 Před 4 lety

    There is also another way to generate energy from a singularity, but feeding it matter so that it forms an accretion disc, the matter in the disc becomes compressed, forming fusion reactions, releasing large amounts of energy. Some of the engery is swallowed by the singularity to keep it in existence, the rest is then used by the ship to power the warp nacelles. While not as effective as matter/ antimatter reactions, while it would require more fuel overall, one would not have to worry about having to contain any antimatter, and the resulting saving of space can be used for increased storage of fuel for the singularity.

  • @pyrosauria7444
    @pyrosauria7444 Před 4 lety +6

    So what’s the possibility that one of these micro-black holes develops into an actual blackhole, consuming near by terrestrial bodies and ships while growing?

    • @hudsonball4702
      @hudsonball4702 Před 4 lety +9

      look at it's name MIRCO-black hole. a black hole of it's size will quickly dissipate. not fast enough to stop the ship from imploding, but fast enough not to start sucking everything else around it.

    • @Rudofaux
      @Rudofaux Před 4 lety +6

      The same reasoning black holes created here on present Holy Terra (Earth) evaporates within seconds of their creation. There simply isn't enough mass within to sustain its own existence.

    • @cameronhoy5383
      @cameronhoy5383 Před 4 lety

      I actually think this is a possibility. If the ship is able to keep the singularity fed with a matter flow right up until the point that they eat shit. Then the black hole could possibly survive long enough to start consuming the casing of the core and promptly fall through the floor and into the planet where it grows until it eats the whole thing.

    • @patrickmccurry1563
      @patrickmccurry1563 Před 4 lety +4

      @@cameronhoy5383 Not realistically. A micro black hole has an event horizon of less than an atom's width. Even feeding it intentionally would be damn near impossible. Of course, Star Trek is about the literal impossible for story's sake.

    • @cameronhoy5383
      @cameronhoy5383 Před 4 lety +3

      @@patrickmccurry1563 I've just done some back of the envelope calcs and yeah. You're totally right, the black hole would need to be much more massive than a ship could realistically hold to have a chance of surviving long enough.

  • @mb2000
    @mb2000 Před 4 lety

    It’s a good job that none of these black holes went crazy with all the Warbirds we’ve seen get destroyed. I can see the Battles of Chin’Toka going very differently; “Sir, the Romulan flagship has been destroyed... and it’s taken two of the systems planets with it!”, “My God! Shields! Shields!!”

  • @maendelejj
    @maendelejj Před 4 lety +2

    How about discussing types of deflector dishes on various ships & cultures?

    • @josephcontreras8930
      @josephcontreras8930 Před 4 lety +1

      Yeah what's the use for deflector screens if they don't work to properly protect your ship from damage from torpedoes and phaser fire???

  • @alih8252
    @alih8252 Před 4 lety

    Nice ships

  • @joeywall4657
    @joeywall4657 Před 4 lety

    Fuck. Yes.
    Been anticipating this one for a looooong time!

  • @user-xs2bf6vb9t
    @user-xs2bf6vb9t Před 2 lety +1

    The video is awesome, you really did your research but I have a issue with Romulan Black hole warp drive, without going in to detail about how it would spin and radiate itself out, but I'm going to make life easy and just believe that Q is manipulating forces on every Romulan ship 😅 🖖🏻

  • @theodoremccarthy4438
    @theodoremccarthy4438 Před 3 lety

    In my head canon the Romulus use a combination of Penrose effects and Hawking radiation to extract energy from the micro singularity. Both of these can eventually deplete the core (as Hawking radiation causes the mass of a black hole to gradually decline). While early singularity cores were simply “charged” with enough energy to last for decades of operation, later designs included the ability to “recharge” the core by adding mass and spin to it while relying on an external power source (like solar radiation). This would effectively give a Romulan craft unlimited range, though the breakdown of the physical components of the drive system is still and issue.

  • @ericcastillo4026
    @ericcastillo4026 Před 4 lety

    Singularity cores are basically near infinite sources of energy (about 15 to 20 years of fuel) that what the romulans use them for, basically instead of having to re fuel every few months like the Federation or the Klingons or having to go to a gas giant and getting the matter for the reaction they don't need to cause it there already, also in the diagram you showed the core should have been at the center of the ship so that it field could encompass the ship creating a constant gravity effect, it a lot easier to control that way, oh and btw that type of engine has been use in countless sci-fi novels as a source of both energy (which does very well) and as a propulsion system, they are call gravitic engines and they are considered the most advanced form of energy production at least in those novels.

  • @Automatik234
    @Automatik234 Před 4 lety +9

    Where's the music from? Sounds a lot like Dune.

    • @ThomasTee
      @ThomasTee Před 4 lety +5

      Defenitly David Lynch's Dune.
      Edit: Got the wrong name ;)

    • @thesinfultictac5704
      @thesinfultictac5704 Před 4 lety

      That's what it was I couldn't place it at first

  • @stevangucu522
    @stevangucu522 Před 4 lety +4

    Judging by the music it is more likely they also use Spice Melange.

  • @ShaunRF
    @ShaunRF Před 3 lety +1

    Despite popular misconceptions about black holes, the implosion method of destruction is not realistic in this case, unless the singularities they employed were at least the mass of a large planet. If it were the mass of a mountain or smaller, then the most notable effect would be the massive energy output of Hawking radiation.

  • @theloneomega574
    @theloneomega574 Před 4 lety

    Since black holes that tiny almost instantly dissipate into hawking radiation, I'd think a larger ship like a D'deridex might have some, 10% say, of the ship from the outermost parts survive and get flung past the center. That would certainly be pretty cool to look at.

  • @bigguy7353
    @bigguy7353 Před 4 lety +5

    You could use the energy from the vacuum of the singularity itself. It's magnetic field would allow for only a small amount of "fuel" to be used and the output would be ridiculously efficient.

  • @onetruekeeper
    @onetruekeeper Před 4 lety

    With some more experimentation with their singularity drive, the Romulans may eventually discover the " Inversion Drive " mentioned in Diane Duane's Star Trek novel called " The Wounded Sky " . With that drive they can cross Inter-galactic space in an instant.