Redemption & tachyon detection grid

Discussion in 'Star Trek: The Next Generation' started by JesterFace, Jun 23, 2014.

  1. JesterFace

    JesterFace Fleet Captain Commodore

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    This has always bothered me and does it every time I watch these two episodes. Couldn't the Romulan ships just go around the grid... I mean space is 3 dimensional.

    The explanation I've come up with is that a ship doesn't necessarily even have to pass through the grid, Federation can keep an eye all around the grid since they've flooded the area with tachyons and the tachyons do travel faster than light and increase speed when energy drains, at least those are the theories of today...

    I don't know... It just would be fun for once watch these apisodes not having trying to explain the grid to myself and how it works =)
     
  2. jimbotron

    jimbotron Fleet Captain Fleet Captain

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    That has always bugged me too. That happens all the time in Trek though: http://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/Main/TwoDSpace

    Only a few times has Trek used space in three dimensions (Star Trek 2, Star Trek 6, future Enterprise-D in AGT)

    Voyager could have avoided most of its troubles if it has just flown around certain obstacles.
     
  3. Nebusj

    Nebusj Rear Admiral Rear Admiral

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    Presumably the grid crosses a region of space strategically important enough that, for the duration of the crisis, it's improbable any Romulan ships not going past it would have anything to do with the matter.

    For a parallel, the United States set up many early-detection radar systems watching for Soviet nuclear missiles coming over the North Pole. There's no logical reason they couldn't have come over the South Pole, only practical ones in which it'd be so much harder to deliver missiles on target in strategically useful times.

    If there's only the time or vessels available to put up one detection grid, put the grid where you expect ships have to pass.
     
  4. jimbotron

    jimbotron Fleet Captain Fleet Captain

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    somebuddyX likes this.
  5. CorporalCaptain

    CorporalCaptain Fleet Admiral Admiral

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    That's wrong, though. ICBMs are suborbital, so they have a definite range limit. They don't attain orbital velocity. The B in ICBM stands for ballistic. That's the logical reason why we won't get an attack from over the South Pole with existing missile types. Over the North Pole is the shortest distance, and over the South Pole is simply beyond the missiles' ranges.

    With respect to the episode, there really isn't a way to get the tachyon detection grid to make sense without an inordinate amount of handwaving. With the number of ships, and the distances they discussed, it was dumb.
     
  6. jimbotron

    jimbotron Fleet Captain Fleet Captain

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    While Star Trek is set in space, Star Trek has always been analogous to traveling on the ocean and arriving at different ports. As such, it has to follow two-dimensional logic. Like CorporalCaptain said, lots of handwaving is needed.

    In cases where ships hide in nebulae or use cloaking devices, suddenly it becomes like a submarine story. Otherwise it's like any encounter on the open water.
     
  7. Timo

    Timo Fleet Admiral Admiral

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    ...Except for those that are orbital - see FOBS. It's just that it's more practical to build ICBMs that go less than halfway around the globe than ones that go more than halfway. Both because short-ranged missiles are cheaper, and because missiles with a short flight time are better at surprise strikes. It follows that building seemingly sub-par tripwire radar chains is also practical, because there's no need to defeat the worst enemy imaginable - merely the existing one.

    Yup, as opposed to aerodynamic. Nothing to do with whether they are capable of orbiting stuff or not. (Indeed, many are used for orbiting satellites today, with appropriate upper stages that could trivially have been added to them while they were doomsday weapons, too.)

    As for the tachyon detection grid, it's got absolutely nothing to do with whether space is two- or three-dimensional. It's all about how long a detour the Romulans are willing to make, regardless of the exact direction that this detour is going to involve. A two-dimensional network surface blocking three-dimensional space is perfectly appropriate, just like a one-dimensional line of ships is perfectly appropriate for the two-dimensional surface of an ocean - assuming the distances work out.

    We don't know how wide the net is. At some point, we can start arguing it's wide enough; below that point, it is not. What we do know is that on one occasion, two ships in the grid were close enough to each other that it was practical for them to physically rendezvous (the E-D/Excalibur encounter, reusing "Yesterday's Enterprise" footage of a point-blank meeting). If one or both of those ships could cover the distance in the time involved without spraining a warp coil, it follows that the Romulans could do the same. But if the distance involved was that of two neighboring nodes only, it's possible that the extreme nodes of the net would still be located so far apart that the Romulans could just as well give up and sail home.

    The Okudagrams give little sense of scale - except when the ships start moving to cover the "hole" in the net, and that movement is very fast, faster than the movement we observed in "The Wounded" when the Phoenix warp-maneuvered next to a warship and a transport in the immediate vicinity. This would seem to suggest the net was in fact fairly compact, and we're back to the "makes no sense whatsoever" point, but we can probably appeal to all sorts of factors here, as it's just a symbolic computer graphic.

    Timo Saloniemi
     
  8. CorporalCaptain

    CorporalCaptain Fleet Admiral Admiral

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    Timo, FOBS and similar systems are banned by treaty. I specifically said that my remarks applied with respect to existing missile types.

    As for the meaning of the word ballistic, you are correct that ballistic trajectories can be orbital. However, if a de-orbit burn is needed to bring a payload down from orbit, the payload isn't really a projectile in the sense of ballistics, which was my point, badly worded though it it was. FOBS was an innovation that warranted its own name.
     
  9. JesterFace

    JesterFace Fleet Captain Commodore

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    Let's not argue because we should not be angry at each other but at Ron Moore for writing such weirdness =)

    I stand by my theory because... it's mine and sort of makes sense to me.

    If Redemption 1 and 2 sucked it wouldn't be a problem, I would just not watch them, but they're both good episodes, apart from the gridthing.
     
  10. Timo

    Timo Fleet Admiral Admiral

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    But because of that, they sort of missed the point. Just like NebusJ said, the reason we can have something like the DEWline (or, perhaps, the tachyon detection grid) is because existing weapons are nowhere near as lethal as they theoretically could be. There's no absolute obstacle to building missiles that would make DEWline useless and ridiculous, but there are plenty of practical obstacles to the building of such weapons, hence DEW still makes (made) sense.

    And, conversely, this is why there was no point in building anything better than DEW. Always settling for the barely adequate is how escalation contests are won (ask the Royal Navy, say).

    This might be relevant for the tachyon grid, too: a clever Picard would initially deploy it in a rather ineffective, closely packed form, trying to goad the Romulans into acting. Were they to try and outmaneuver the grid, Picard could then up the ante and deploy the ships ten times farther out, then a hundred times. The moment the Romulans got fed up with that game and acted directly against the grid, Picard could legitimately cry uncle and launch a war the Romulans had no stomach for.

    Yup. But the reason the B is there in the ICBM is not because the weapon flies like a cannonball, with just one initial boost - it's there because the weapon doesn't have wings. Anything lacking wings would have gotten that B when such things were first created.

    Apart from that, an ICBM is always a multistage affair, with a prolonged boost phase that in fact represents a major part of the entire flightpath, so not really "ballistic" in that puristic cannonball sense, either.

    Not as much an innovation as a strategic choice. Sure, back then, it took good technology to get A-bombs to retrograde orbits. But just twenty years later, the technology involved would have been trivial; the game was played with different cards at that point, using bans rather than missiles to improve one's strategic deterrent. Today, we could build missiles to defeat the most grandiose Star Wars defense plans, but there's no need because actually existing ABM systems are feeble and impotent. So a casual observer would be deceived as regards the actual state of the art in missile building. Or antimissile defenses for that matter.

    Timo Saloniemi
     
  11. BillJ

    BillJ The King of Kings Premium Member

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    I'd add "The Enterprise Incident" and "The Tholian Web" from Star Trek season three.
     
  12. PhoenixClass

    PhoenixClass Lieutenant Commander Red Shirt

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    I've gone with the theory that the grid is large enough that by the time they make it around, it would be too late to deliver the supplies where they were needed.

    I try not to think about it, and the episodes are so good that when I am watching them, I usually don't.
     
  13. LMFAOschwarz

    LMFAOschwarz Fleet Captain Fleet Captain

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  14. Nebusj

    Nebusj Rear Admiral Rear Admiral

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    Yes, dear, and you know that, if it were desired, it would be possible to build missiles with a bigger range. It wasn't desired, though, because the practical problems were overwhelming: they'd have to be pretty near orbital bombers to start with, they'd have to deliver much smaller bombs, and they'd have pretty much no chance of actually hitting their targets reliably (certainly for the Soviet Union, probably for the United States, depending on just which decade we're talking). While the sensor net of radar lines might be evaded by sending missiles over the South Pole, nothing useful could be sent that way, so it's sensible to concentrate detection systems where the missiles are obviously going to come from.
     
  15. Timo

    Timo Fleet Admiral Admiral

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    ...It's a slightly different issue whether it pays off to do something utterly non-sensible once in a while to overwhelm the defenses of the rationally prepared enemy. One might argue that when A builds a defense that is at the upper limit of sensible, it always is a good idea for B to invest in defeating that, because a) the enemy will be beggared and b) you will get the initial victories that may be decisive against a self-impoverished enemy. The Maginot line might have warranted the preparing of an invasion army capable of defeating it through application of modern technology, say, because the line was relying on technologies that did not take into account modern developments in air power and armor, and it was beggaring the defender. But of course the more sensible approach was to circumvent the line.

    Did Picard reveal the Federation hand by deploying a sensor net representing the absolute state of the art, allowing the Romulans to study it at length, and even allowing them to challenge it without retribution? Or did the net represent just a fraction of the capabilities of a) Starfleet and b) the technology in question? I sort of think it was the latter, because in "Face of the Enemy" already this very technology is considered a decisive deterrent against all intrusions from the Romulan Star Empire! That's an upscaling of literally astronomical magnitude. And it suggests that Picard could have gone astronomical whenever he wished, too, extending his net to cover not just a few lightyears (?) but a few hundred or thousand if the Romulan actions warranted this.

    Timo Saloniemi
     
  16. Robert Comsol

    Robert Comsol Commodore Commodore

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    PICARD: It is our intent to prevent any external power from interfering in Klingon affairs.
    SELA: Nor do we have any plan to do so. But Captain, if for any reason we chose to enter Klingon territory, how would you stop us? With our cloaking devices we can slip by you at will.
    PICARD: Then why don't you just take your ships across?
    SELA: You sound eager for us to try. Perhaps you've discovered a method in detecting our ships? However, I don't think you asked me here to discuss our military situation. ...

    SELA: Yes I know and so does Picard. He's giving us exactly what we need and he expects us to take it. No. We won't step into Picard's trap. We will disable part of his network here, where they're weakest. We'll direct the energy burst right at the ship with the android captain.

    :eek: How did Sela learn that Data was on that ship? The prelude to the aforementioned scene suggested the Romulans could only observe the movement of the ships but didn't listen to com-traffic.

    Bob
     
  17. Marsden

    Marsden Commodore Commodore

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    Marsden is very sad.
    That reminds me of this, a little.

    STILES: Captain, may I respectfully remind the Captain what has happened? The Romulans have crossed the Neutral Zone, attacked our outposts, killed our men.
    KIRK: Mister Stiles.
    STILES: Add to that the fact it was a sneak attack.
    KIRK: Mister Stiles, are you questioning my orders?
    STILES: Negative, sir. I'm pointing our that we could have Romulan spies aboard this ship.
    SULU: I agree, sir. Respectfully recommend all decks maintain security alert.
    KIRK: Very well. All decks, security alert.
    SULU: Security alert, sir.
     
  18. jimbotron

    jimbotron Fleet Captain Fleet Captain

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    Perhaps they scanned the ships and detected an artificial lifeform on the bridge and deduced that he transferred over to command. It's been established that sensors can detect different kinds of lifeforms (including artificial).
     
  19. Robert Comsol

    Robert Comsol Commodore Commodore

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    Although I don't know how accurate Romulan scanning equipment performs once cloaked, how would the sensors tell the Romulan ship that the artificial lifeform is the captain? :confused:

    Actually, Marsden's reference to "Balance of Terror" (don't be shy :D) made me wonder about a couple of things that could put some issues into a completely different perspective (irony on):

    Now, Stiles suggestion occurs before they see Romulans for the very first time. Certainly, it puts Spock in an uncomfortable position, but instead of acting like Data aboard the Sutherland in "Redemption II", Spock starts to act out of character, shows insecure behaviour and is neither cool or logical.
    Actually not a big surprise considering the Romulan Commander looks like his father and could be some kind of twin. It's unlikely this is his father's Vulcan twin brother working undercover for the Federation, but could it be his father is actually a Romulan which would make Spock not half-Vulcan but half-Romulan instead? :eek:

    It almost looks as if Kirk knows that's something is rotten on the Planet Vulcan, as he most efficiently provokes Spock in "This Side of Paradise":

    KIRK: An ambassador from a planet of traitors. A Vulcan never lived who had an ounce of integrity. You're a traitor from a race of traitors. Disloyal to the core, rotten like the rest of your subhuman race. (Does Kirk know more han he is willing to admit in public?)

    Then the strange circumstances of the death of the Tellarite ambassador in "Journey to Babel" at a moment where Sarek didn't have an alibi. Kirk asks explicitly who aboard could perform such a kind of execution:

    KIRK: Who aboard would have that knowledge?
    SPOCK: Vulcans. On Vulcan, the method is called tal-shaya. It was considered a merciful form of execution in ancient times.


    There are over 100 delegates from other Federation (!) planets aboard, but none of them is possibly a suspect, yet an Orion somehow learned what must be secret knowledge of ancient Vulcan executing form. Hear, hear! :rolleyes:

    Then there was "The Enterprise Incident". Was the Romulan Commander really that naive or did she just miss her opportunity to tell Spock about his true Romulan half to win him over?

    Fast forward to TNG: On Stardate 44390.1 the Enterprise-D receives Vulcan Ambassador T'Pel ("Data's Day") who turns out to be actually the Romulan Sub-Commander Selok, an imposter. Did nobody ever check her credentials? How could she attain that status on Vulcan? Don't the Vulcans share personnel files with other Federation members or Starfleet? How is any of that remotely possible? :wtf:

    On Stardate 44769.2 Starfleet has apparently reacted to the aforementioned incident and put Admiral Norah Satie in charge as a special investigator (about darn time, I'd say). Can we really blame her for being overcautious when Romulan sabotage might be involved? Unfortunately in "The Drumhead" things go south at the expense of Admiral Satie who was probably sent back into retirement (the whole affair was probably a Romulan ploy to get rid of her to start with).

    Next the Romulans kidnapped and brainwashed a member of the Enterprise-D ("The Mind's Eye") and we finally learned that Sela had secret information about Data being put in command of the Sutherland (Dr. Selar, anyone?) And a couple of weeks later Ambassador Spock vanishes without a trace and it is only by chance the Federation learns he had left for Romulus.

    Well, in "Amok Time" he claimed he had to return to Vulcan, take his wife or die. He returned to Vulcan, didn't take his wife but lived. Maybe in "Unification" Pon Farr took Spock to the planet he should really call home...

    Could be an issue worthy of further examination - or not (irony off)

    Bob ;)
     
  20. Marsden

    Marsden Commodore Commodore

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    Marsden is very sad.
    I was just thinking some times, Romulan spies are around.


    Ambassador T'Pel/Subcommander Selok might count.
     
  21. Robert Comsol

    Robert Comsol Commodore Commodore

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    Might count? I think Romulan Admiral Mendak would like to have a word or two with you, too:
    A patriot! She has performed her service to the Empire with distinction.

    And Sub-Commander Selok explicitly showed Picard her gratitude: Thank you for your help, Captain.

    Bob ;)

    P.S.
    IIRC that was the first and only time an Enterprise captain was humiliated by the Romulans.