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- From: pww@bnr.ca (Peter Whittaker)
- Newsgroups: misc.writing
- Subject: Re: Reserach in Fiction
- Message-ID: <1992Jul21.141728.29806@bwdls61.bnr.ca>
- Date: 21 Jul 92 14:17:28 GMT
- References: <1992Jul17.162953.2417@HQ.Ileaf.COM> <BrJrIH.5DF@unx.sas.com> <1992Jul20.175859.571@HQ.Ileaf.COM>
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- Organization: Bell-Northern Research Ltd., Ottawa
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- In article <1992Jul20.175859.571@HQ.Ileaf.COM> hal@HQ.Ileaf.COM (Hal Wadleigh) writes:
- >One example of a "howler" is the use of parsecs as a unit of time in Star Wars.
-
- That's fine: all units of distance are acceptable as units of time as
- well. It is perfectly legitimate for me to say "See you in 90
- gigametres"; you might have difficulty figuring out that I mean "See
- you in 5 minutes", but that is something we'd have to work out.
-
- How do 90 Gm and 5 min equate?
-
- speed of light (c) = 3x10e08 m/s
-
- 5 min * 60s/min = 300 s
-
- 300 s x c = 90 x 10e09 m = 90 Gm.
-
- The real howler in Star Wars was that they probably used "parsec" to
- mean a fairly short time; a parsec is just over 3 years long.
-
- pww
-