In most episodes, I get the impression that when a captain orders a ship to go to warp 6, say, there's a flash and the ship almost immediately seems to be at the desired speed.
But is this actually true , or is there an 'acceleration' phase involved? (I'm not even sure if the term would be appropriate when discussing warp propulsion, but here goes). I know that in TMP, the ship has to -relatively slowly- accelerate its way to warp 7, but that could be because of the state of the engine room and warp engine at that moment.
And, if there is an acceleration phase, how long would it typically take a starship from standstill to its top cruising warp speed ? Milliseconds? Seconds? Minutes ? Is anyting about this said in any technical manual ? (I don't posess these).
EDIT: actually, I meant speeds that are 'comfortable' for the ship, so perhaps I should have written: "how long would it typically take a starship from standstill to its standard warp speed ?"
But is this actually true , or is there an 'acceleration' phase involved? (I'm not even sure if the term would be appropriate when discussing warp propulsion, but here goes). I know that in TMP, the ship has to -relatively slowly- accelerate its way to warp 7, but that could be because of the state of the engine room and warp engine at that moment.
And, if there is an acceleration phase, how long would it typically take a starship from standstill to its top cruising warp speed ? Milliseconds? Seconds? Minutes ? Is anyting about this said in any technical manual ? (I don't posess these).
EDIT: actually, I meant speeds that are 'comfortable' for the ship, so perhaps I should have written: "how long would it typically take a starship from standstill to its standard warp speed ?"
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