Thanks for the enthusiastic response to the article. Thanks for all the emails, and it is nice to see some interesting discussion in the talkbacks (who knew?). A few updates: People have sent links to several sources that explain many of the questions I had. One is the pandorapedia. Another is A Confidential Report on the Biological and Social History of Pandora. And people sent the script treatment. I have not read the entirety of that last one yet, but the first two are interesting reading. Levitating mountains: As dozens of people have pointed out, the mountains supposedly contain unobtainium, a room-temperature superconductor. Superconductors expel magnetic field lines, and as a result magnets can levitate above a superconductor. Here superconducting mountains are apparently levitating over the strong magnetic field of the moon or planet, or both. I had thought about some kind of mechanism like that but dismissed it for two reasons: (1) how could mountains form, stay in place, be weathered and shaped, etc. (2) if there is unobtanium in the floating mountains, why not get it there so as not disrupt the Na'vi. But I think I was just short-sighted. In the case of (1), the intention is that the mountains started out attached, but broke off and floated upwards at a certain point, and now they sort of float around. I buy that, at least enough for a cool movie scene. And for (2), maybe the unobtanium in the mountains isn't the right kind, or isn't pure, or is hard to mine. Interestingly, a geologist emailed me with another sighting indicating the strong magnetic field of the planet: the stone arches seen at the climax seem to be from mineral growth along magnetic field lines. Awesome. Plenty of people have asked where the water comes from for the waterfalls in the floating mountains. To me, it is just like a normal mountain, with the bottom missing. Where does the water come form in normal mountains with waterfalls: rain and snow. Yes there was tons of water, but have you ever been to Yosemite in the spring? When the snow melts it all comes down at once, and it is an impressive sight. And this is a little out of the purview of this article, but plenty of people have also asked why the humans didn't nuke the planet from orbit. (A) maybe they didn't bring any -- the proverbial "somebody's gotta go back and get a shitload of dimes" problem, and (B) you people scare me! Why doesn't the US just nuke countries we don't like? That is not cool, man. Planet rotation: Someone affiliated with the film who asked me not to name them (but who ought to know) says the planet rotation scene was intended to be time lapse. Brilliant. I'll have to see it again to confirm that, but I'd buy it, because I think there were other shots where the planet didn't seem to be rotating quickly. Oxygen atmosphere: I said that Pandora doesn't have an oxygen atmosphere, but I was wrong about that -- it does, but it has other gasses that are poisonous to humans. Clearly Cameron, a fellow diving and deep sea enthusiast, thought of this, because the people only need simple gas masks to breathe, and not huge oxygen tanks. DNA: The Pandorapedia says the Avatars don't have DNA, just something analogous so that you can map to it. Great! Although, from my memory, the movie implies they do have DNA. I'd need to see it again to be sure. Maybe the character explaining it knows as much about DNA as most people do and just got it wrong. If I had a nickel for every time I was at a partly and someone told me that they heard that "they" (meaning scientists) have broken the speed of light, teleported something, etc. Interstellar travel: From the pandorapedia: "Mission Profile: 0.46 year initial acceleration @ 1.5 g to reach 0.7 c; 5.83 years cruise @ 0.7 c; 0.46 year deceleration; 1 year loiter in orbit around Pandora; Mission Duration: 6.75 + 1.0 + 6.75 = 14.5 Earth years. However, relativistic effects shorten the time onboard ship to slightly less than 6 years each way." Hmm, I don't think that calculation is quite right, but it is close enough. To see, let's take the special relativistic part, the cruising speed. If ET is Earth Time, ST is Ship Time, v is velocity, and c is the speed of light, then ET=ST/SQRT(1-v^2/c^2). So ST=5.83*SQRT(1-0.7^2)=4.1 years for the cruising. Even if you assume there is no time dilation on the accelerating and decelerating parts, then the trip is only 5 years, not 6. Maybe they are including the hanging out on Pandora time. To do the calculation correctly I'd have to drop some GR on you bitches, and I'm too lazy and you'd be bored. 70% of the speed of light is a good figure though -- it is almost plausible! From what I've read of the ship technologies, they sound very well thought out too. Eyes: One of those sources mentioned that some of the creatures have two pairs of eyes -- one visual, and one that sees in the IR for nighttime hunting. Sweet! This is not without precedent. We have two separately evolved "circuits" for vision in our brains -- one primitive automatic one and another one for conscious sight. Look up "blindsight," where people with damage to the latter circuit can't consciously see, but can catch a ball. And of course we have two types of cells for day / night vision in our eyes: cones that allow you to see color when there is plenty of light, and rods that allow you to see black and white only, but give you night vision. Try this: put an eye patch on while you are inside for about 30 minutes, then go out where it is dark and blink between your dark and light adapted eyes. You can really see the color difference. It is awesome. Wow, it appears that many of my nitpicks about the science were actually taken into account by the filmmakers and there are answers. I'm impressed! Hats off to Cameron and company for getting all this right. I can't wait to use this film in my introductory astronomy classes. -Copernicus