Interesting - where is this map from?
I found it on the internet too long ago to remember.Interesting - where is this map from?
Ironically, the old Star Trek Star Charts book suggested the same thing back in '02 with "subspace shortcuts." It proposed that NX-01 Enterprise used one (thanks to a Vulcan star chart) to make the journey from Earth to Qo'noS in just four days, implying that it would have taken much longer without it. The Enterprise-A may also have used a subspace shortcut to get towards the center of the Galaxy so quickly. On the other hand, not knowing where any subspace shortcuts were in the Delta Quadrant may have doomed the Voyager to a long trip home.The idea of space lanes could explain different speeds
Cosmic Strings might allow a variable speed of light
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Variable_speed_of_light
Why not a variable speed of warp?
I’m all for space anomalies of all sorts. Magnetic storms, wormholes, what they used to call a black hole. On multiple occasions, there are advanced species which somehow teleport the Enterprise 1,000 ly.
But I just don’t think it’s part of the background assumption of normal travel, which seems to be point A to point B, with no consideration for a detour to point C to catch a slipstream. To me the answer to “Why not a variable speed of warp?” is simply because it’s not very helpful. It obscures rather than clarifies your actual speed. It takes something fathomable and makes it unfathomable. And it’s just not intended in the script.
Yeah, the only thing that one could infer from the show is that warp speeds do seem slower when closer to a star (presumably because of some interaction of the drive with a gravity well). Other than those examples most canonical times/distances are measured in thousands of times the speed of light. It seems easier to just believe the warp drives are much faster than any behind the scenes stuff would indicate than trying to make up other variables/conditions that are never mentioned on the show.But I just don’t think it’s part of the background assumption of normal travel, which seems to be point A to point B, with no consideration for a detour to point C to catch a slipstream. To me the answer to “Why not a variable speed of warp?” is simply because it’s not very helpful. It obscures rather than clarifies your actual speed. It takes something fathomable and makes it unfathomable. And it’s just not intended in the script.
I’m all for space anomalies of all sorts. Magnetic storms, wormholes, what they used to call a black hole. On multiple occasions, there are advanced species which somehow teleport the Enterprise 1,000 ly.
But I just don’t think it’s part of the background assumption of normal travel, which seems to be point A to point B, with no consideration for a detour to point C to catch a slipstream. To me the answer to “Why not a variable speed of warp?” is simply because it’s not very helpful. It obscures rather than clarifies your actual speed. It takes something fathomable and makes it unfathomable. And it’s just not intended in the script.
*drunkpost* I’m all for all of that. My only point is that 40 mph means 40 mph no matter how it’s achieved. If nobody is arguing against that, we’re 100% good.
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It would make warp factors dependent on local stellar and subspace conditions, and in a fully charted region of space, a starship navigator may even know where the fastest "currents" are and take those in account when plotting a course.
It seems that the only two in-episode factors that affect the speed of ships are magnetic potentials (WNMHGB and The Galileo Seven) and diving/traveling close to a sun (Tomorrow Is Yesterday, Operation: Annihilate! and The Paradise Syndrome) with the second cases maybe just a reverse spin on the first factor, i.e. magnetic potentials. The first factor propelled ships much faster than the normal speed of the ship (SS Valiant and Shuttlecraft Galileo). The second factor slowed a ship at high warp as it traveled near a sun. In these slower cases, a ship at warp may have been slowed by running head-on into a sun's magnetic field and its ionized, electromagnetically charged solar wind. Otherwise, warp factors are a constant speed but much, much faster than we think.YMMV.
For raw data, there's an extensive listing and discussion of warp speed examples, including from TOS, here:
http://www.starfleetjedi.net/forum/viewtopic.php?t=6329
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