The thing is, the writers missed a terrific idea there, too...Well, the oddest bit about self-replicating mines is their ability to replicate ANYTHING with only their limited energy stores and still remain cloaked and armed. Just saying, they seemed a bit more like borrowed 25th century tech to me.
Suppose that the "self-replicating mines" weren't self-powered at all, and didn't carry any "mass reservoirs"... but instead were somehow powered by the wormhole (and got their mass from efflux out of the wormhole as well)?
This would be a bit better explanation... and also avoids the whole pesky "malfunctioning self-replicating mine creates a never-ending 'bacterial colony' of mines which destroys the universe" issue.
Tie 'em to the wormhole, both figuratively and literally.
Maybe they have "verteron pulse collectors" for power, so every time the wormhole opens, dumping energy and mass, they "reproduce?"
I could have accepted that (albeit, granted, it's still "magic"... at least it's LOGICAL magic!) more easily than the poorly-thought-through idea we got.
Getting energy from the wormhole wouldn't require the wormhole to be "open." It's always there, it's just not always visible unless a ship is coming through it.But wasn't the whole idea of self replicating mines to prevent Dominion forces from coming through the wormhole, and prevent it from being taken down by the Dominion in the Alpha Quadrant? If so, wouldn't the idea you presented only work with ships coming through the wormhole, thus providing the energy and mass needed. Destroying the mines from the AQ side would be easy since the mines have no power or matter to self replicate.
This would be a bit better explanation... and also avoids the whole pesky "malfunctioning self-replicating mine creates a never-ending 'bacterial colony' of mines which destroys the universe" issue.
Nowhere is it implied that it doesn't. Especially considering what a wormhole actually IS, and therefore doesn't literally "open" or "close." Like the Barzan wormhole, it simply becomes visible when a certain amount of radiation builds up in the event horizon, as when a ship crosses into it or something like that.Nowhere in DS9 is it implied that the closed wormhole generates energy.
Not necessarily so.The bajorans were a spacefaring species for thousands of years. Then the cardassians came with a massive occupation army.
If the wormhole was a significant energy source, they would have detected it - energy sources consistently show up on sensors in star trek.
Whatever "the temple of the prophets" is, it's not a fountain of energy - at least, not when it's closed.
Star trek ships could scan a planet to the core in minutes and detect any geothermal energy.Not necessarily so.The bajorans were a spacefaring species for thousands of years. Then the cardassians came with a massive occupation army.
If the wormhole was a significant energy source, they would have detected it - energy sources consistently show up on sensors in star trek.
Whatever "the temple of the prophets" is, it's not a fountain of energy - at least, not when it's closed.
"Energy" can be found in a great many forms, and tapped in a great many ways.
Geothermal energy is a great "real world" example. An area which, on the surface, produces no useful energy, can, if you use a little ingenuity, produce a great deal.
The energy was always there, but not easily identified.
Maybe the energy output from the wormhole is some similarly "obscured" form... but once they got familiar with the properties of the wormhole, they learned to tap into.
You really don't get it, do you?Star trek ships could scan a planet to the core in minutes and detect any geothermal energy.Not necessarily so.The bajorans were a spacefaring species for thousands of years. Then the cardassians came with a massive occupation army.
If the wormhole was a significant energy source, they would have detected it - energy sources consistently show up on sensors in star trek.
Whatever "the temple of the prophets" is, it's not a fountain of energy - at least, not when it's closed.
"Energy" can be found in a great many forms, and tapped in a great many ways.
Geothermal energy is a great "real world" example. An area which, on the surface, produces no useful energy, can, if you use a little ingenuity, produce a great deal.
The energy was always there, but not easily identified.
Maybe the energy output from the wormhole is some similarly "obscured" form... but once they got familiar with the properties of the wormhole, they learned to tap into.
One of the few tech things that were consistent throughout star trek was that energy sources - regardless of their type - showed up on sensors like a christmas tree.
You really don't get it, do you?Star trek ships could scan a planet to the core in minutes and detect any geothermal energy.
One of the few tech things that were consistent throughout star trek was that energy sources - regardless of their type - showed up on sensors like a christmas tree.
ENERGY EXISTS IN MANY DIFFERENT FORMS.
You have to know what to look for.
Maybe they weren't looking for that SPECIFIC FORM.
Trouble is, the Feddies were detecting wormholes (and occaisionally causing them) nearly 100 years prior to DS9... still a pretty hard leap of logic to make that no one could pick it up if it had been bleeding energy all that time with several powers crawling all over the area.
Okay. I'll admit defeat. You clearly know the "real science" behind the Bajoran Wormhole, and thus know (incontrovertably) that it's IMPOSSIBLE for there to have been some form of energy associated with that wormhole that nobody knew how to look for.You really don't get it, do you?Star trek ships could scan a planet to the core in minutes and detect any geothermal energy.
One of the few tech things that were consistent throughout star trek was that energy sources - regardless of their type - showed up on sensors like a christmas tree.
ENERGY EXISTS IN MANY DIFFERENT FORMS.
You have to know what to look for.
Maybe they weren't looking for that SPECIFIC FORM.
Quoting Vance:
Trouble is, the Feddies were detecting wormholes (and occaisionally causing them) nearly 100 years prior to DS9... still a pretty hard leap of logic to make that no one could pick it up if it had been bleeding energy all that time with several powers crawling all over the area.
Whatever that SPECIFIC FORM was, they knew what it was - and that means it was relatively easy to find with star trek sensors.
Noone found it because it wasn't there.
You're joking, right?Cary.. the problem, once again, is that the powers mentioned knew what Wormholes are and had been scanning them for at least a century. You're trying to invent a new layer of BS here, saying 'THIS wormhole emitted Absurdium energy, and therefore doesn't count' in order to win an argument that only you are having in the first place.
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