Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull

Jun 06, 2008 01:25

My spoiler-free review:


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Comments 17

ford_prefect42 June 6 2008, 06:16:15 UTC
AWWWW!!!! you ruined it! Now I don't wanna go see it!

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pakgwei June 6 2008, 06:19:50 UTC
was that really called for?

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doc_quixote June 6 2008, 11:45:39 UTC
Yeah, a lot of people seem to feel that way about it.

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bathalamus June 6 2008, 12:29:17 UTC
Ok. I know that is a formula relating to magnetism. However, I cannot recall what it is used for. Help? (yes, I fail my geek roll for asking)

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papercuppie June 6 2008, 13:27:45 UTC
I don't think you fail your geek roll-- you're the first to mention magnetism :)

It's the Biot-Savart law... which might not be wholly appropriate, actually, depending on what exactly in the Crystal Skulls cause the magnetic field. At any rate, it's used to find the force exerted on a charged particle by a magnetic field.

Anyway, the important bit is the "over r squared" part. When Indy is in the warehouse at the beginning (we're talking first ten minutes of the movie, so I'm not really spoiling much if you haven't seen it), and he locates the magnetically charged item he's looking for by tossing gunpowder into the air from across the warehouse, and then everyone gathers close to it and somehow doesn't manage to have all of the metal on their persons ripped summarily off their persons... well, that's the part of the movie where I turned to my friend and hissed "OVER R SQUARED ( ... )

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american_arcane June 6 2008, 14:23:48 UTC
Yeah... I do believe they made the point near the middle of the movie that it wasn't magnetism (due to the gold thing)... and then just kind of left it hanging there.

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papercuppie June 6 2008, 14:47:17 UTC
Okay, the choices are:
1) Gravity
2) Electromagnetism
3) Strong force
4) Weak force

1: subject to inverse square rule
2: subject to inverse square rule
3 and 4: not in effect at any distance observed in the movie

Gold is not ferromagnetic, by the way, but that's not the only magnetic state. I don't know enough about magnetism to say whether "it attracts gold" disqualifies the force as magnetic. They continued referring to it as magnetism, at any rate.

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nongamer June 6 2008, 14:30:31 UTC
For a minute there I thought LJ supported LaTeX like Mediawiki does.

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