The Con-Artist Physics of Ocean's Eleven:
Hit Movie Plays Fast and Loose with Nature's Laws
Albuquerque, New Mexico (January 8, 2002)--Before most moviegoers
walk into the hit comedy "Ocean's Eleven," starring
George Clooney and Julia Roberts, they don't realize that
the Las Vegas con-artist caper contains some physics in its
plot.
In the film, eleven con artists employ a physics device,
called "the pinch," to help them rob a vault containing
the riches of three casinos. Set off in the middle of Las
Vegas, the pinch detonates an intense "electromagnetic
pulse" that blacks out the city's power grid for a few
moments.
As it turns out, some physics labs really do have devices
called "pinches"-the movie's website touts the reality
of the concept--but can they really produce such impressive
effects? Inside Science News Service asked physicists to help
separate fact from fiction.
"I enjoyed the movie and the 'pinch' was an amusing
twist but had little to do with science," says Jeff Quintenz,
a physicist at Sandia National Laboratories in New Mexico.
Quintenz should know-he works on a real-life pinch device,
one of the world's largest, at Sandia. A 100-foot diameter,
20-foot tall cylinder-shaped machine, Sandia's "Z-pinch"
is the world's most powerful electrical generator.
"I can confirm the Sandia Z-pinch is the inspiration
for the movie's gimmick," says Neal Singer, a science
writer in the Sandia media communications group. A year or
two ago, Singer spent several hours talking to the prop people
from the movie about the Z pinch, which creates lightning-like
tangles of startling color for a few billionths of a second
as it fires-making it a very colorful, if bulky, piece of
work.
"We discussed Z's possibilities as a plot mechanism,"
says Singer. "I explained it might be hard to move the
Z machine to the top of a stationwagon and fire it off in
mid-Vegas; that didn't stop them, obviously."
Well, at least the characters ultimately fitted the pinch
in a van rather than a stationwagon. But Sandia researchers
have more news: even their colossal Z-pinch doesn't generate
a very strong electromagnetic pulse.
The pinch is "a poor EMP source," says Sandia's
Jeff Quintenz. "We have on occasion interfered with the
sensitive electronics in cameras and computers located in
the same laboratory space," he says, but "to my
knowledge we have never caused a problem with any electronics
or electrical system outside the accelerator building itself."
Instead, the Z mainly produces x rays, which have a variety
of scientific uses, from simulating the outpourings of neutron
stars to understanding the devastating effects of nuclear
weapons to testing possible designs for clean, abundant fusion
energy. The Z pinch gets its name from the fact that an initial
burst of electricity creates a magnetic field that compresses
or "pinches" a gas of charged particles along the
vertical direction, denoted by scientists as the "z"
direction. Creating a bunch of hot, moving charged particles
generates a rainbow spectrum of intense x-rays, but a feeble
EMP.
In the end, nuclear weapons are probably the only existing
devices that could really create electromagnetic pulses with
a blackout punch. EMPs from a nuclear blast would contain
intense electric and magnetic fields. These fields would generate,
in power cables, overwhelming electrical currents which would
trip circuit breakers and temporarily shut down a city's power
grid.
But this byproduct of a nuclear blast would be the least
of a city's worries-and not a very appealing plot device in
a lighthearted film like "Ocean's Eleven," where
no one gets killed.
What's more, perhaps even the filmmakers themselves did not
realize that their pinch pulls off the ultimate swindle. As
portrayed in the movie, the pinch apparently violates the
most fundamental principle of physics, the conservation of
energy, which says that energy can be converted from one form
to another, but never created out of thin air. Any van-sized
electricity source, not just a pinch, says Quintenz, is just
too small to store the energy required to produce a blackout-generating
EMP.
Still, with many other films flouting reality much more blatantly,
it would be unfair to hold "Ocean's Eleven" to a
tougher standard. And although the movie's fictional pinch
is far different from the Sandia's Z-pinch, that did not ruin
the film for Quintenz.
"All that said, it didn't detract from my enjoyment
of the movie," Quintenz says.
## ## ##
For more information contact:
Ben Stein
Inside Science News Service
(301) 209-3091
Experts:
Jeff Quintenz
Sandia National Laboratories
(505)845-7245
Neal Singer
Sandia National Laboratories
(505)845-7078
Web:
Official
Ocean's Eleven site describes "the pinch"
(scroll to the last paragraph)
Recent
news release on Sandia Z Pinch
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