Wasn' there some massive planet/planetoid/moon shown very close to Vulcan in TMP? Was that retconned in some way?
The gravity on Vulcan is much greater than Earth so Vulcan must therefore be larger in size than Earth and would therefore look larger in the sky to a neighbouring body then the Moon looks to Earth. In other words a planet could pass by close to Vulcan but be at a greater distance to Vulcan then the Moon is to the Earth and still allow for such a large view of Vulcan in it's sky...
Let's face it, it'd be hard for two planetary bodies that both were class M to sit that close in space to each other.
Delta Vega (or I think T'Khul) was not class M. It was class G.
I understand they wanted to use a planet which had resonance for us fans, but it was jarring and I don't like it!
Delta Vega IS NOT in the Vulcan system.
Wouldn't Delta Vega 5 be the fifth planet in the Delta Vega star system?I understand they wanted to use a planet which had resonance for us fans, but it was jarring and I don't like it!
Delta Vega IS NOT in the Vulcan system.
No, Delta Vega isn't in the Vulcan Star System but Delta Vega 5 (the fifth planet with the name Delta Vega) is.
I understand they wanted to use a planet which had resonance for us fans, but it was jarring and I don't like it!
Delta Vega IS NOT in the Vulcan system.
The new Trek movie is not canon. Its an alternate reality!![]()
Wouldn't Delta Vega 5 be the fifth planet in the Delta Vega star system?I understand they wanted to use a planet which had resonance for us fans, but it was jarring and I don't like it!
Delta Vega IS NOT in the Vulcan system.
No, Delta Vega isn't in the Vulcan Star System but Delta Vega 5 (the fifth planet with the name Delta Vega) is.
As far as I know, planets would only get that name in lack of a better one. Is anything preventing Vulcan from being Delta Vega 4?Wouldn't Delta Vega 5 be the fifth planet in the Delta Vega star system?No, Delta Vega isn't in the Vulcan Star System but Delta Vega 5 (the fifth planet with the name Delta Vega) is.
Well if we go by the old standard of naming planets yes but i'm trying to give a reason for why it should be called Delta Vega and be located in the Vulcan system.![]()
No, not a sudden disappearance. If I were to stand next to you in the same room, my own gravitational pull would be stronger than the planet Jupiter's gravitational pull on you. If Jupiter suddenly disappeared, you wouldn't notice unless you were standing on one of Jupiter's moons.I'm a pharmacist, not a physicist, dammit! but out of curiosity...
Would Vulcan's sudden dissapearance screw up the orbits of the rest of the planets in the system? Would one of them be pulled into Vulcans old orbit and thereby occupy it's "habitable zone"?
I would have used Epsilon HorlogiiThe writers have said they used the name Delta Vega for a different planet than in the second pilot--they just liked the name.
I would have used Epsilon Horlogii
For starters, Delta Vega seemed to be Earthlike. No difficulty moving, no space suits, not even masks of any kind.
I am not sure on that. But just because a planet isnt class M doesnt mean that a person can not walk around on it without breathing apparatus, etc...If you're saying it was Vulcan's sister planet (it's apparent "moon" in TMP) that's class G, then we're not talking about that.
We're talking about Delta Vega and Vulcan, both of which appear to be class M.
Remind me...
Was DV called "class G" in WNMHGB?
I do not think it is odd that Vulcan could be class M while Delta Vega could be some other class. Look at the difference between Earth and the moon. Delta Vega clearly is large enough gravitational body to maintain an atmosphere. Though the fact that it looked like a frozen wasteland would suggest that it didnt have much of an atmosphere. (of course, we didnt see other parts of the planet but I am happy to think it all looked the same and that delta vega was the Vulcan sister planet)...Odd that Vulcan would be class M, but Detla Vega wouldn't.
Anyway, the point had to do with mass and gravity, and from what we've seen, both Vulcan and DV are close to Earth conditions in that regard. So again, two Earth type planets as close to each other as we saw in Spock's meld image...
Uh uh.
It felt just like home for meIt didnt look very Earthlike to me. Looked like it was a frozen wasteland.
Actually, class L through O can {barely} support life, anything else doesn't without environmental or pressured suits.I am not sure on that. But just because a planet isnt class M doesnt mean that a person can not walk around on it without breathing apparatus, etc...
On the contrary, it requires a complex atmosphere for the weather phonomenas present to occur (high winds, snow, ...)I do not think it is odd that Vulcan could be class M while Delta Vega could be some other class. Look at the difference between Earth and the moon. Delta Vega clearly is large enough gravitational body to maintain an atmosphere. Though the fact that it looked like a frozen wasteland would suggest that it didnt have much of an atmosphere.
I'll just repeat what I said here. I see no reason why another planet near to Vulcan can't exist and harbour life and an atmosphere as well as see Vulcan in the sky. It's easily possible.
I understand they wanted to use a planet which had resonance for us fans, but it was jarring and I don't like it!
Delta Vega IS NOT in the Vulcan system.
No, Delta Vega isn't in the Vulcan Star System but Delta Vega 5 (the fifth planet with the name Delta Vega) is.
There are some planets much closer to one another than Mars and Earth, and the distance is also highly variable given orbits.I don't follow. It seems to me that a more relevant comparison would be the distance between Earth and Mars, or Earth and Venus. Both these planets are quite close to Earth and are visible in the sky but only as small glimmers of light only a little larger than stars and certainly nowhere near even the moon in apparent size, let alone Delta Vega in the current film.
I'll just repeat what I said here. I see no reason why another planet near to Vulcan can't exist and harbour life and an atmosphere as well as see Vulcan in the sky. It's easily possible.
I don't follow. It seems to me that a more relevant comparison would be the distance between Earth and Mars, or Earth and Venus. Both these planets are quite close to Earth and are visible in the sky but only as small glimmers of light only a little larger than stars and certainly nowhere near even the moon in apparent size, let alone Delta Vega in the current film.
As far as I can tell, the only way Delta Vega could plausibly be that close to Vulcan were if it were in orbit around Vulcan, which I don't believe is the case, though that may very well have been the original idea.
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