Sorry, got to disagree. Trek '09 had just the same amount of actual science as previous Trek production, that is to say hardly any at all. They even got Carolyn Porco from JPL to tell them about Saturn and then tossed it all out and went with what looked cool. It's popcorn entertainment, not a science documentary.
Even as drama it's pretty lightweight. City on the edge of Forever. If Edith Keeler lives the nazis win WWII. "Sorry Edith. Shove. Thud!" Instead it gets dragged out until Kirk can make this "dramatic" moment of stopping McCoy. If they had been acting clearly Edith would have been cold 5 minutes after Spock found the diversion point.
I can't agree either.
Star Trek has had more than it's fair share of science (listed in example previously) but it's rarely gone out of it's way to get it wrong like this movie has.
*Describing a supernova impossibly wrong
*Diving into an atmosphere without the slightest sign of friction.
*Warp cores that fall faster than starships
*Seeing a planet from the surface that isn't any where near it's orbit...
No Trek movie has these sort of errors.
-In the original Series the writers wrote that the Enterprise had the possibility of sawing a moon size object in half... (incredulous but not impossible) but then Enterprise gets gets back to the planet at sublight which should have taken much longer that 2 months.
-In Tin Man the Enterprise is flung a considerable distance from a supernova but the nova shows up on screen instantly.
-However in Blood Lines The Enterprise must race to a point within 20 minutes and is one of the few times Trek gives a distance and time which of course gives us the speed and it actually works out to be the speed of Enterprise at warp 9.
-Or when Enterprise is pushing a moon Geordie's dialogue actually gives us the required Delta v the Enterprise would have to induced to succeed.
-The same episode Enterprise is show impacting the atmosphere accurately which Abrams couldn't even get right in his film.
-But in TWOK the Enterprise is 5 hours from Regula at warp 5 when they fight Reliant loosing their warp drive but their trip, nor Reliants, doesn't take several months.
-Remember THE EGG and Dr. Stubbs project to research the binary system? Well such stars are real! They actually build up material over a long period of time and explode.
-Where No Man Has Gone Before got the distance to the Triangulum Galaxy correct at under 3 million Ly.
-Or even the simple use of depressurizing a shuttle bay to move the ship is accurate in Cause and effect.
-Amazingly the entire idea of field propulsion may indeed be possible and has inspired science to explore the possibility.
-even the "everyday" use and understanding of warp cores using hydrogren and deuterium is accurate to what would actually be used for an antimatter reactor.
-There are no less than 38 REAL star systems quoted in Trek from TOS to ENT.
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But Trek 09' what did it do right is an easier question to answer than to go through all it got wrong. I mean they were sitting in the middle of a black hole....a black hole and communicating back and forth at the end....
We take for granted that Trek uses all these simple facts to ground our imagination and give it's fiction the aura of plausibility and fandom sometimes TOO readily accepts the silly and the incredulous making the mistake that nothing has really change and all things are equal when they aren't.