February 13th, 2013
pejmanyousefzadeh

jtotheizzoe:

How the Star Wars Kessel Run Turns Han Solo Into a Time-Traveler

In what may be my favorite Star Wars-themed science article ever written (and that’s saying a lot), Kyle Hill analyzes Han Solo’s oft-criticized description of completing the Kessel Run in less than 12 parsecs … and discovers he was probably a time-traveler.

The problem arises because a parsec is a unit of distance, not time. So Han’s statement implies that he found a Kessel Run shortcut. In the Star Wars universe, this famous smugglers’ route skirts dangerously close to some black holes. So if the Millennium Falcon can keep from being sucked in, it must be really fast. 

And that’s where it gets cool:

So for the purposes of calculating the Kessel Run, let’s say the Millennium Falcon is the fastest ship ever. Somehow able to withstand the forces involved (perhaps it has something to do with that sweet tractor-beam tech), we can calculate what happens when Han and his baby go 99.9999999 percent the speed of light, or 0.999999999c.

Funny things happen to time when you start traveling close to the speed of light. Time runs normally for you, but everyone else moves forward at an increased rate, covering years while you only experience minutes. What does this time dilation mean for Han?

Because the shortened Kessel Run spans 12 parsecs (39.6 light-years), a ship traveling nearly light-speed would take a little more than 39.6 years to get there. Factoring in time dilation, anyone watching the Kessel Run would see Solo speeding along for almost 40 years, but Solo himself would experience only a little more than half a day.

If you haven’t picked out the potential pitfall for the Star Wars timeline I’ll spell it out: In the time it takes Han to complete just one Kessel Run, the rest of the galaxy battles, negotiates, and force-chokes its way through almost 40 years — and pushes the date of Solo’s birth 40 years further into the past.

It gets better. Go read the rest at Wired.com.

I promise you that George Lucas anticipated none of this.

Reblogged from It's Okay To Be Smart
  1. jamesskaar reblogged this from bonniegrrl and added:
    i’d suggest their universe’s ftl drives allow for some measure of compensation, so the engines would perhaps travel back...
  2. thegrumpyshoe reblogged this from proofmathisbeautiful
  3. outfitofafashionablesciencewoman reblogged this from jtotheizzoe
  4. helkitty1639 reblogged this from itsxandy
  5. hoccypocky reblogged this from iamthedroidyourelookingfor
  6. luckykrys reblogged this from hayllyn
  7. drmcawesome reblogged this from itsxandy
  8. hayllyn reblogged this from aforaffort
  9. seasonalprogress reblogged this from vileviall
  10. rosestripedsuit reblogged this from itsxandy
  11. smollzo reblogged this from itsxandy
  12. donpete reblogged this from itsxandy
  13. random-ception reblogged this from itsxandy
  14. jocicausa reblogged this from andythanfiction
  15. wytchkraft-the-architekt-of-kaoz reblogged this from jtotheizzoe
  16. quickthinkofsomethingclever reblogged this from proofmathisbeautiful
  17. messier51 reblogged this from lure-of-freedom
  18. lure-of-freedom reblogged this from andythanfiction
  19. sci-bsiokbe reblogged this from jtotheizzoe
  20. knitmeapony reblogged this from evelark
  21. evelark reblogged this from monsieurbombardier
  22. tutoring-on-up reblogged this from aforaffort
  23. jelenedrake reblogged this from still-working-on-believing
  24. qu33nofspades reblogged this from nerdyvixen
  25. nerdyvixen reblogged this from still-working-on-believing
  26. thenorn reblogged this from twofish
  27. ninjash8 reblogged this from aforaffort

Likes

Your source for a certain percentage of things related to Pejman Yousefzadeh.

Networks

Following