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Re: What, no planet kablooey? | |
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by jpiwf » Sat Jan 02, 2016 1:50 pm | |
jpiwf
Posts: 4
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In 'Iron Sunrise' by Charles Stross a few asteroids with engines go on a multiple decade revenge expedition as kinetic missiles to a neighbouring starsystem after a planet is destroyed.
Peter F. Hamilton throws things he calls 'Hawking M-Sinks' (portable black hole) into a planet in 'Judas Unchained'. Lots of nastier weapons in that series though: quantumbusters, novabombs, DF-Spheres. |
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Re: What, no planet kablooey? | |
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by noblehunter » Sat Jan 02, 2016 3:48 pm | |
noblehunter
Posts: 385
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Card has a molecular disassembler thing called the Doctor device (IRRC) in Ender's Game. Dismantles things like ships but also including planets.
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Re: What, no planet kablooey? | |
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by exiledtoIA » Sat Jan 02, 2016 4:13 pm | |
exiledtoIA
Posts: 129
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"The Shiva Option" by David Weber and Steve White. Used "Sledgehammer" and "Hammer" class asteroids to destroy a "bug" planet. |
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Re: What, no planet kablooey? | |
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by cthia » Sat Jan 02, 2016 6:22 pm | |
cthia
Posts: 14951
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This sounds like a very good read and it's fairly recent. I admit to being ignorant of the title and the author. This thread has me taking names and planning an order. Waldenbooks or Barnes & Noble will be made quite happy. I always order enough Sci-Fi to send to friends in Romania. They eat American Sci-Fi there. I'd like to take the time to thank everyone for sharing some interestingly resounding er sounding leads er reads er leads er... Thanks. Son, your mother says I have to hang you. Personally I don't think this is a capital offense. But if I don't hang you, she's gonna hang me and frankly, I'm not the one in trouble. —cthia's father. Incident in ? Axiom of Common Sense |
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Re: What, no planet kablooey? | |
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by niethil » Sat Jan 02, 2016 6:52 pm | |
niethil
Posts: 151
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We might want a more precise statement for what we are thinking about. Something like a gradation in destructive power.
If I am not mistaken, based on previous posts and own reading, it burns down to this. Under wiping out or seriously thinning the dominant specie : Meteor strikes (Starship Troopers), Nuclear Winter (real world), Proto-molecule (Caliban's War) Under sterilising the planet : Shadow Planet Killer (B5), Foreshadow (Lexx), Sledgehammer (Shiva Option), Planetary Bombs (Yamato), Sunbeam (Lensman) Under reducing a planet to debris : MD (Ender's Game), Death Star (Star Wars), Vorlon Eclipse Planet Killer (B5), C frac rocks (Dahak) And under making a planet entirely disappear : Nova Bomb (Andromeda), Dahak (Dahak), Vogon fleet (H2G2), spade and a lot of work (Ringworld, Dyson), Hypergate explosion (Lost Fleet), Negasphere (Lensman) Above that level, there is nothing, except maybe Chuck Norris. -------------
'Oh, oh' he said in English. Evidently, he had completely mastered that language. |
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Re: What, no planet kablooey? | |
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by jpiwf » Sat Jan 02, 2016 7:01 pm | |
jpiwf
Posts: 4
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I might have misnamed the 2nd book, it's in his commonwealth series, but i believe the m-sink appears in one of the void trilogy books. Same universe, 2000 years later. Bigger book, although with Hamilton a book is always big. Some of the thickest books in my colection are his. All are good reads, start with 'Pandora's Star' and proceed from there. The 1st book is a sequel to 'Singularity Sky', but reads well as a stand alone. |
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Re: What, no planet kablooey? | |
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by phillies » Sat Jan 02, 2016 7:14 pm | |
phillies
Posts: 2077
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If you do not mind war games: In several of the Taurus games intergalactic warfare games, the battlecruisers could take out an enemy solar system, it would appear, by *ramming*.
After all, they were heavily armoured throughout. And four light years long. |
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Re: What, no planet kablooey? | |
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by cthia » Sat Jan 02, 2016 7:23 pm | |
cthia
Posts: 14951
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Nice categorization niethil. I agree it needed to be done. TBH, I didn't realize the depth of planetary destruction -- didn't take into account simple specie sterilization, nor did I reckon on entire galaxies and gasp universes being wiped out on a whim (still anxious to read those). I loved Lexx, but by the time I stumbled onto that Sci-Fi show, it had already been cancelled and I was doomed to reruns. I was always gob smacked by how matter-of-factly Lexx destroyed... "Lexx, destroy that planet." Ka-blθθey, "Planet destroyed." Son, your mother says I have to hang you. Personally I don't think this is a capital offense. But if I don't hang you, she's gonna hang me and frankly, I'm not the one in trouble. —cthia's father. Incident in ? Axiom of Common Sense |
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Re: What, no planet kablooey? | |
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by Loren Pechtel » Sat Jan 02, 2016 7:41 pm | |
Loren Pechtel
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Lensman--spans the galaxy and beyond. Dahak--Earth, deep space, a star system I forget. |
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Re: What, no planet kablooey? | |
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by Loren Pechtel » Sat Jan 02, 2016 7:43 pm | |
Loren Pechtel
Posts: 1324
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Yeah, the bugger homeworld was destroyed by it. |
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