I was looking into ship steering commands last night, with traditional compass bearings and what not, and a thought occurred to me about how starships navigate in Star Trek. Firstly, without a "North" as a point of reference to steer from, how do starships go about steering a course? Equally, it would seem to me the current compass degree system would work fine in two dimensions (think "120 degrees; Port!") but would need something added in the Z axis... in aircraft this is done with altitude but how do you calculate that when you are in space where there isn't always a point of reference? The altitude does seem to be called out in Wrath of Khan, so maybe when giving steering commands the reference point is meant to be a point within the ship (so instead of steering towards\away from north and the ground, the ship is steering L-R Up-Down from a point within it's body, like the bow? That's mean the ship's AI must have a rudimentary kinesthetic sense of not just where other bodies are, but itself, and be able to calculate data to that effect for users to make decisions with.)
I'm sure someone knows how Trek deals with this sort of thing, as well as how real spacecraft do, and will provide me with answers about this. It's just a random thought I had...
I'm sure someone knows how Trek deals with this sort of thing, as well as how real spacecraft do, and will provide me with answers about this. It's just a random thought I had...