Could stardates make some sense?

Discussion in 'Star Trek - The Original & Animated Series' started by Robert Comsol, Aug 7, 2013.

  1. Robert Comsol

    Robert Comsol Commodore Commodore

    Joined:
    Sep 10, 2012
    Location:
    USS Berlin
    (I wanted to add some new information to the thread we last had on the issue but somehow wasn't unable to relocate it)

    On Harvey's blog ("Captain's Log, Stardate: Unknown") he featured some historic information (previously unknown to me) how the producers had hoped stardates would be utilized:

    1313.5 would be noon one day, 1314.5 would be noon of the next one or simply 1 full digit = 1 solar day.

    Another cool website features all the scenes intended by the screenplay (but remained unseen in the final episode). There's pretty cool stuff there but "Court Martial" caught my attention regarding the topic:

    According to Stone and the original script, Kirk and the Enterprise had already covered 19 months of the five-year-mission by the time of "Court Martial".

    Assuming that the five-year-mission began at Stardate 1312 ("Where No Man Has Gone Before"), 1,635 stardate units would have passed before "Court Martial" (Stardate 2947).

    Assuming 1,000 units equal one solar year (suggested by TMP etc.), one month would equal 83.3 units and 19 months therefore 1,583.3 stardate units. That's rather close to 19 months, especially since Stone probably wasn't as specific as you'd expect Spock to be. ;)

    Bob
     
  2. Warped9

    Warped9 Admiral Admiral

    Joined:
    Aug 3, 2003
    Location:
    Brockville, Ontario, Canada
    Right off a lot of people don't consider WNMHGB as part of of the 5-year mission given how different everything aboard ship looks (and there's no omniscient narrative in the opening credits). The general thought is Kirk was given command of the Enterprise not long before a refit and then the ship embarked on its 5-year mission.

    Your idea could still have merit, though. Kirk could have commanded the ship for about a year and a half before its refit and assignment to a 5-mission.
     
  3. Robert Comsol

    Robert Comsol Commodore Commodore

    Joined:
    Sep 10, 2012
    Location:
    USS Berlin
    But if I recall correctly The Making of Star Trek had a couple of quotes from original screenplay excerpts that suggested that the five-year-mission began with WNM. :confused:

    Bob
     
  4. MacLeod

    MacLeod Admiral Admiral

    Joined:
    Mar 8, 2001
    Location:
    Great Britain
    It really wasn't until TNG that 1000 stardates equalled a year. IN TOS the stardate was used so as not to pin down when the show was set. We didn't get that until the start of TWOK with the capton "In the 23rd Century".
     
  5. Warped9

    Warped9 Admiral Admiral

    Joined:
    Aug 3, 2003
    Location:
    Brockville, Ontario, Canada
    I don't think so. In TMoST the small bio on Kirk says he's commanded the Enterprise for about two years. This is reprinted from the Writer's Guide when the series was in production. Makes sense that Starfleet would have liked to test Kirk's mettle some before sending him out on an extended specialized mission. The gist of it means Kirk has already had the Enterprise for awhile when the series gets going. If he had the ship for two years of the five and then we had three more years (of the series) then that's the whole five years there at the end of the run. But most people accept we only saw the first three years of the mission and not the last two. Well, you could count TAS as the fourth year.

    From all this my take is that Kirk commanded the Enterprise for about seven years at the end of the five year mission.

    There is a question begging and it can be taken two ways: not just how much elapsed time between given dates, but what are stardates measuring? Are they a measure of a universally shared time system or are they only measuring ship's time independent of other ships, starbases and planets.

    Stardate 1312.8 = 3.5942 Earth years (or about 43 months) if 1 unit equals one day. Did Kirk already have the ship for three years by the time of WNMHGB? The largest stardate for "All Our Yesterdays" is 5943.7 which would be 16.2729 years. We know at that point Kirk hasn't had the ship for 16 years.

    If every 1000 stardate points is one year then every decimal point = .365 Earth days or 8.766 hours. I'd like to see the rationalizing of that system.

    We do know in TOS and TNG they still measure time in seconds, minutes and hours. The question now is how many hours in TOS make up a day? Is it still twenty-four? If so then what is the relation between the stardate and measuring time on a 24 hour cycle? Is a ship's duty shift still eight hours or is it ten or something else?

    Confusion is added because there is no delineation between the numbers in a stardate except for the decimal point. Maybe there is but it just isn't shown that way. On Earth we could express today's date as 07-08-2013 or 08-07-2013 and most everyone has a pretty clear idea what is being referred to. And note that stardates never make note of the time (or so it seems) while in modern ship's logs they do make note of the time of events and log entries.

    The use of stardates sounds futuristic, but I don't think a lot of thought was put into what they are actually supposed to mean. It was also a way of distancing themselves from being tied to a familiar Earth calendar. It's still fun trying to reason it out, though.
     
    Last edited: Aug 7, 2013
  6. Warped9

    Warped9 Admiral Admiral

    Joined:
    Aug 3, 2003
    Location:
    Brockville, Ontario, Canada
    I had another thought: what if 1 stardate unit = 10 hours?

    Stardate 1312.8 = 547 days or 1.4976 years.

    Stardate 5943.7 = 2476.5416 days or 6.78 years.

    The difference between the two would be 5.2827 years.

    Hmmm, now it seems a lot closer.
     
  7. Christopher

    Christopher Writer Admiral

    Joined:
    Mar 15, 2001
    I find it's best not to worry about stardates. The producers didn't want to be specific about when the show was set, lest they guess wrong about how long it would take for new technologies to be developed, so they created stardates specifically to convey no meaningful information whatsoever. They're basically numerical lorem ipsum.

    They aren't even always consistent within a single work. There are four stardates given in ST:TMP, and the number of hours that elapse between them can be roughly deduced from dialogue, and there's no consistency at all. Between the onscreen stardate at Starfleet HQ (7410.2) and the first log entry (7412.6), some 14 hours elapse, which works out to about 6 hours per unit. From there to the second log entry (7413.4) is about 3 hours in-story, which is about 3.75 hours per unit. But from from there to the final log entry (7414.1) is over 20 hours of story time, which comes out to something like 32 hours per unit! So if it doesn't even hold together within a single story, there's no hope of making sense of it overall.


    Indeed. If you think about it, a trip to the galaxy's edge and back should take months. It's a major expedition in its own right, not some routine leg of a 5-year general survey tour.

    Plus, the ship was pretty severely damaged after the mission to the rim, and would've needed even longer to limp home than to get out there in the first place. And it would've needed serious repairs after its return, hence the refit between WNMHGB and the series.
     
  8. Gojira

    Gojira Commodore Commodore

    Joined:
    Oct 15, 2008
    Location:
    Stompin' on Tokyo
    Am I the only fan that doresn't care about star dates? I generally just ignore them.
     
  9. Warped9

    Warped9 Admiral Admiral

    Joined:
    Aug 3, 2003
    Location:
    Brockville, Ontario, Canada
    Sure, it's a storytelling gimmick, but some fans still like trying to make some sense of it. And there's no harm in it.
     
  10. Robert Comsol

    Robert Comsol Commodore Commodore

    Joined:
    Sep 10, 2012
    Location:
    USS Berlin
    Hmm...please allow me to kick one elephant out of the room, the Stardate 7410.2 is an alteration / addition of the TMP Special Edition that was never present in the original version of TMP, neither onscreen nor in Gene Roddenberry's novelization. I reserve the right to consider it conjectural.

    The novelization states the launch stardate from drydock as Stardate 7412.3 and (novel only!) 2.7 hours later it's Stardate 7412.6 while the Enterprise is still cruising at sublight and doesn't warp/alter the fabric of space and time.

    This perfectly matches the assumption that 1,000 stardate digits equal one solar year, 2.736 digits one day and 0.114 digits one hour.

    The other stardates you mentioned are inconclusive except that at 7412.6 the IP estimate is 20 hours and at this point in time V'ger is less than 48 hours away from Earth.

    At 7413.4 it's more than 24 hours away from Earth (warp drive has just been repaired) and at 7414.1 they estimate that they are 4 hours from Earth but can't really tell because they are inside V'ger.

    We do not learn if V'ger had increased his speed getting closer to Earth and whether therefore the interception point ETA (20 hours originally) had been shortened.

    I have to admit that my 1,000 digit = 1 year theory had been based by relying on the screen-accuracy of the novelization and works pretty well up until TVH with only minor twists, IMHO.

    However, I realize now that the TMP onscreen dialogue does not state "2.7 hours from launch" but actually "1.8 hours from launch". :eek:

    Bob
     
  11. Hober Mallow

    Hober Mallow Commodore Commodore

    Not only do I not care about stardates, I like that they're so inconsistent that it drives some fans nuts trying to work them out.

    :)
     
  12. Mr. Laser Beam

    Mr. Laser Beam Fleet Admiral Admiral

    Joined:
    May 10, 2005
    Location:
    Confederation of Earth
    I've long since given up trying to force any kind of consistency into the stardate system. They're just random numbers and we all know it - Gene Roddenberry made them up so he wouldn't have to follow the Christian calendar. But as to what the numbers mean? Nobody knows, and to say otherwise would be a fib. :p
     
  13. sariel2005

    sariel2005 Lieutenant Red Shirt

    Joined:
    Jul 4, 2009
    yeah, beyond a general trend for stardates to go higher as the missions increase there is little consistency, something that carries over to TNG.
    not really sure the 1000 units is a year really works on TNG either TBH, some internal dating seems to contradict that to
    (Datas day opens a very large can of worms - and is followed shortly after by Galaxy's child which occurs about a year after Booby trap according to Geordi ).

    Stardates go up.... except when they don't
     
  14. CrazyMatt

    CrazyMatt Fleet Captain Fleet Captain

    Joined:
    Feb 21, 2013
    Location:
    Sitting in Kirk's command chair
    Moving forward from WNMHGB, these ideas make sense. But what happens when you move backwards? Isn't there a birth date on the "James R. Kirk" tombstone in WNMHGB?
     
  15. Warped9

    Warped9 Admiral Admiral

    Joined:
    Aug 3, 2003
    Location:
    Brockville, Ontario, Canada
    In "The Menagerie" there's also a Stardate visible on Pike's classified report regarding Talos 4 that Mendez shows Kirk. I believe the dates are 1100s as opposed to 1300s we see in WNMHGB,
     
  16. Robert Comsol

    Robert Comsol Commodore Commodore

    Joined:
    Sep 10, 2012
    Location:
    USS Berlin
    @ Crazy Matt

    I think the tombstone engraving in WNM remains a subject of debate. One camp (to which I belong) believes "1277.1" to refer to the stardate James T. Kirk had been promoted to the rank of captain ("C"). I believe this theory holds water because the time span engraved here ends in what is the current stardate of the episode. Essentially it may be a sick joke of Gary Mitchell to emphasize on the short career of James "Rice" (academy nickname) Kirk as a starship captain.

    The other camp believes it to be a birthdate (old Federation calendar? not explicitly listed as "stardate"!), much like the birthdates in Mitchell's and Dehner's file we see earlier in this episode onscreen. The thing is that the different digits in those files correspond to the difference in actual age of Mitchell and Dehner.
    But there's no way, IMHO, to align "1277.1" within such a hypothetical system. If it were not a different time measuring system, one would need to ask why they didn't use stardates in "The Cage" because obviously Mitchell and Dehner had been born prior to events in this episode.

    @ Warped9

    I'm pretty certain there is no stardate mentioned in "my" ;)
    file on Talos IV.
    Is it possible you are thinking of the Mitchell and Dehner files from WNM instead?

    Bob
     
  17. Warped9

    Warped9 Admiral Admiral

    Joined:
    Aug 3, 2003
    Location:
    Brockville, Ontario, Canada
    There's no date spoken by Pike in "The Cage" or "The Menagerie" but I'm pretty sure there is a date printed on the report Mendez shows Kirk.
     
  18. Kemaiku

    Kemaiku Admiral Admiral

    Joined:
    Dec 23, 2004
    Location:
    Northern Ireland
  19. Warped9

    Warped9 Admiral Admiral

    Joined:
    Aug 3, 2003
    Location:
    Brockville, Ontario, Canada
  20. Kemaiku

    Kemaiku Admiral Admiral

    Joined:
    Dec 23, 2004
    Location:
    Northern Ireland
    To be honest I thought there was one myself and was looking for the image to find it, it might be in the dialouge so I'll find an oppertunity to rewatch the episode and see.