Common Stereotypes In The Sci-Fi Epic Interstellar

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The sci-fi epic Interstellar is set at a nebulous point in the future when global crop failures threaten humanity with extinction, so a team headed by Cooper a pilot and a farmer explores exoplanets through a mysterious wormhole near Saturn. Through this wormhole, the team of explorers investigate exoplanets in hopes of finding one that could or perhaps already support life. However, Interstellar is unique that this sci-fi film is surprisingly very scientific that Kip Thorne, a renowned theoretical physicist, served as an adviser and executive producer on Interstellar. In fact, the collaboration between Thorne and the Interstellar visual effects teams were so successful that it will extend into technical papers for the astrophysics and computer-graphics …show more content…

Other food sources such as wheat, potatoes, soybeans, and rice are impossible to grow meaning common feed stocks are no longer available leaving meat to become a costly luxury around the world. 80% of the Earth’s atmosphere is nitrogen, so an important reason for leaving Earth is that humans do not even breathe nitrogen yet blight is known to consume nitrogen for sustenance. Therefore, a positive feedback is created since vegetation created breathable oxygen and as blight continues to consume more plant life, there is less breathable oxygen available for humans and animals which allows blight to thrive and continue to spread father and consume greater quantities. The reduction in oxygen in the atmosphere coupled with the extinction of planet life would make Earth uninhabitable for humans forcing them to search for a new home. It is unlikely that a super disease will appear and wipe out the world’s crops since when one plant form dies off or struggles that often allows for another to thrive. However, the depiction of a new dust bowl is very probable especially with disforestation, global warming, and unsustainable farming methods; the increased soil erosion creating the dust bowl will have a negative impact on agriculture. Interstellar’s reality is closely tied to the …show more content…

Unlike the other exoplanets Edmunds is a greater distance away from the black hole Gargantua making it more habitable; the gravity from the black hole is less effective so comets and other flying objects that can create water and atmosphere are not sucked into the black hole. However, from the vicinity of the crash it seems to be an immense barren dessert but has a lot of potential with a breathable atmosphere and the soil may be fertile for farming. The clouds seem to be an indicator of the possibility of water on the planet. There is also potential for crude forms of plant and animal life and is likely that Edmunds has a diverse environment beyond the desert where Lazarus

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