Scientific Errors in Movies

in #movies4 years ago

Zme Science Editor Rob Lea, Star Wars and Superman movies in some scenes in some scenes, the physics rules are considered to be considered.

labmedya_filmlerdeki-bilimsel-hatalar_1.jpg

Physics errors in the movies are made from time to time. So does it mean that we can forgive these wrongs that a movie is science fiction or fantastic? If your answer is no, we expect you to read the continuation of our summer. In many films such as Star Wars and Superman, physics rules are generally made frequently scientific errors.

The incorrect transmittance of the physics rules is in the structure of the structures and TV programs. Almost every action film, ignition of a gun causes the person to lift the person to lift their feet. The truth is that; According to Newton's third law (there is an equal and opposite response of each movement) If the projectile is strong enough to lift one of his feet from the gun, it should be applied to the same force. Shooting must be a tri-to-hurt or enough to break his wrist.

The wrong physics rules are not only limited to the actions or types of science. The astrophysician Neil Degrasse Tyson realized that James Cameron was wrong with the geographical location of the stars on the sky on the sky on the ship on the sink of the Titanic (1997). That indeed us to ask the question; How much do we know about science?

What physics errors were in the Superman movie?

Richard Donner's Superman movie in 1978 was the beginning of all superhero movies. This film is considered a classic but has some important physics errors. "You'll believe that a man can fly" in the film announced with the slogan, superhuman success is transferred to the audience. First, let's talk about the first view in the costume of Superman's metropolis season. Lois Lane, which Margot Kidder has revived, is rocking from a helicopter on the roof of Daily Planet. CLARK Kent, which is revived by Christopher Reeve, tears his shirt before flying to catch Lane.

There are serious doubts that this is real in reality. To determine how deadly is this "recovering", let's find Lois's Clark Kent's arms, how quickly it is to fall. Apparently Lois falls in the film about 11 seconds.

According to the calculation, Lois is understood that Superman's arms quickly hit about 240 miles per hour. It should be noted that the above calculation does not account for the wind resistance. Fortunately, a license team from Leicester University found that the Superman's wind resistance is taking into account Lois 78.6 m / s (174 miles) quickly captured.

In another scene Superman is flying into space and returning the world backwards.

This would be quite meaningless, but the Superman's time back on this stage. Reversing the turn of the world does not reverse the time. So this does not damage much more than the nuclear bomb? The world's atmosphere suddenly 'stops' -1100 miles quickly – most likely that all things that are not connected to the main rock so tightly caused to launch into space.

Another Movie Series Star Wars … No one should expect Star Wars to do the physics rules correctly. More fantasy than a science fiction film, but this does not mean that we are ignoring some real glaring errors. Star Wars: A New Hope (1977), Luke

And when the first met with Obi-Wan Smuggler Han Solo, Solo is defending Millennium Falcon (spaceship), "This ship has made Kessel Run (a planet in the film) in less than 12 fines." This sentence was told to show how fast the ship is but the problem is not a time unit of money. Solo was clearly referring to the speed of the ship, while Millennium Falcon is continuing by saying that there are several empire vessels behind. However, the parsex is the astronomical distance measure, not time; 1 parsex is equivalent to about 3,0857 × 1016 meters or 19 trillion mile.

labmedya_filmlerdeki-bilimsel-hatalar_2.jpg

Star Wars: In the movie of Empire Strikes Back (1980), the Chewie character needs a toothbrush for the trip to Falcon. The team is traveling through a corrupt hyper drive from the hoth's ice world and this shows that it should travel below the speed of light. The distance accepted between the planets is about 5,0 x 104 the journey should take about 5,000 years. When the Khan and the crew enters an asteroid area, the distance is creating trouble. The fact is that the average distance between the objects in an asteroid belt is more than 75 times the diameter of the Earth, it does not create a lot of cruise problems for a real asteroid set.