I'm furloughed from work for minimum 4-6 weeks because of renovations, so I'm lazily re-editing my work, tightening language & expounding on concepts. Anyway, I'm at a point where I'm talking about warp drive advances & I mention verterium cortenide with a number after it. Is this an isotope? Where the creosoted fuck did I get it from?
After striking out on the internet for answers & with all the local colleges being closed for holidays, I reached out to my science side, who are almost entirely biology-based, to see if they have any nuclear chemistry contacts, & what I was told is that alloys & compounds can't have numbers like that after them. In the meantime, I found the source of numbering–TNGTM, p. 57, mentioning "the verterium cortenide 947/952 coils".
So does anyone have a grasp of what this is supposed to imply? Are they coils made of verterium-947 & cortenum-952? Any science types got an answer? I'd ask Rick Sternbach and/or Mike Okuda directly, but it's such a dumb little thing to bother them about, & quite frankly I doubt either would remember what the implication was after 30+ years.
After striking out on the internet for answers & with all the local colleges being closed for holidays, I reached out to my science side, who are almost entirely biology-based, to see if they have any nuclear chemistry contacts, & what I was told is that alloys & compounds can't have numbers like that after them. In the meantime, I found the source of numbering–TNGTM, p. 57, mentioning "the verterium cortenide 947/952 coils".
So does anyone have a grasp of what this is supposed to imply? Are they coils made of verterium-947 & cortenum-952? Any science types got an answer? I'd ask Rick Sternbach and/or Mike Okuda directly, but it's such a dumb little thing to bother them about, & quite frankly I doubt either would remember what the implication was after 30+ years.