I know that any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from magic. I didn't realise that basic physics and chemistry fell into that category
As already pointed out, the gap between chemical and nuclear explosives is carved into the bones of the universe. While there's little doubt that better explosives can be developed, they won't be significantly better in terms of energy density. Where the improvement is likely to appear is in the shock-wave velocity, which makes them better at shattering things. And, as it happens, not all that much use in a GP bomb.
The other thing is that a 0.5kg bomb, even if it had the explosive force of a 250kg device, wouldn't have done the job. Exploding on the deck, it would make a right mess of the ship, and possibly even set it on fire, but wouldn't necessarily sink it. It would be guaranteed to leave survivors who would either have to be hunted down individually or left as witnesses. Guided down the main hatch into the hold, it would, I think, do enough damage below the water line to sink the ship, but it would be guaranteed to leave even more survivors, who... You know the drill. What it _cannot_ do is penetrate the magazine, detonate it, and shatter the ship so that there is no hulk to be found and no survivors who... It simply doesn't have the mass to penetrate the decking as a gravity bomb, nor could a projectile that light survive intact being driven through several decks at the velocity required to penetrate - any filler would either go off prematurely or not at all.
I suspect - it would take a lot of info we don't have to be sure - that 500# [and 500# is the total weight of the ordnance, not just the fill] is pretty close to the lightest weapon Merlin and OWL could be sure would work. At that, this was probably a semi-AP design with a stronger case and less filler than a GP bomb.
Jonathan_S wrote:6L6 wrote:An example I would use, Merlin droped a 500 lb bomb on the ship that Thirsks family was on, it seems to me that in 400 years a 1 lb bomb should do the same job. evilauthor reread my post, you will see that I was talking about bridging the gap between chemical and nuclear wepons.
I don't have the text in front of me. Did it say the bomb literally weight 500 lbs (or even that the explosive filler weighed 500 lbs)?
It's possible that by the 24th century the "megatons" style designation had worked it's way down to conventional explosives - so unless you're talking about carry weight explosives are talked about in terms of their equivalent tons (or pounds) of TNT.
But that's just off the cuff speculation on my part and might be flat out contradicted by the actual text...