For the same reason we have a huh moment when we find a car that is designed to function on dry land and is built at the bottom of the ocean...
Or a submersible built on dry land? Oh wait...
We can accept that the ship can travel faster than light, but getting off the ground requires an explanation?
We can accept that the ship can travel faster than light, but getting off the ground requires an explanation?
This.
The very same ship, in the very same film is seen happily navigating the atmosphere of a gas giant. Earth's low pressure/gravity is trivial, but somehow puzzling to some.
I really don't understand this whole obsession with where the Enterprise was built. . . the federation has tractor beams, they have transporters, they have anti-gravity technology and inertial dampeners. . . why does anyone think it would be hard to get the Enterprise into space?
1. There's the economic advantage of not transporting thousands of workers and tons of material into orbit to work on it.
2. It's also much less dangerous: workers don't have to wear spacesuits, they don't have to deal with trying to move with accuracy and precision in microgravity. Doesn't matter how advanced the spacesuits are - space is a more dangerous environment than that of good old Earth.
3. Security from interstellar spying could also be a reason, given that this new Enterprise was built later than the original, and is much more advanced, considering what the Federation learned from the Kelvin encounter. (see Parallels where the Cardassians were spying on the Utopia Planitia Ship Yards on Mars --which by the way have Galaxy Class ships being built on the surface). . .
4. Plus, the Enterprise itself will operate with artificial gravity; its entire interior is going to be put under 1G constantly. Shouldn't it be built in those conditions, too? When you build any structure in space, you can't really test what the structural integrity will be in a 1G environment until you flip on the artificial gravity. You could easily build a floor, a wall, a ladder, tubes and internal plumbing with the supports misaligned, and while they would be structurally fine in microgravity, they could collapse once the ship's interior artificial gravity is turned on. And even if something didn't collapse immediately under a 1G load, you couldn't certain that an interior structure was weaker than spec and that it wouldn't collapse later under the constant pressure of gravity later. The only way to be certain is to build the entire ship in a 1G environment so the construction process tests that it is inherently sound as it's being built.
Quite frankly, there is nothing in TOS that said that the Enterprise was built in orbit (it WAS refitted in orbit because it can't LAND -- but even TOS showed that the ship could travel in the atmosphere). . .In TOS, the ship's commissioning plaque says it was built in the San Francisco fleetyards. . . which, since we never traveled to 23rd Century Earth in the TV show, for all we know the yards COULD be in San Francisco, proper. . .
And we know that the Enterprise D and Voyager were built on the surface of Mars at Utopia Planitia, so having ships built on the ground is not a new concept.
.... OR the yards could be in geosychronous orbit above San Francisco, hence their identification with that particular city. This was the line that Alan Dean Foster took in his 'Star Trek Logs'. As I recall, the Enterprise there was built in pieces in the "old" Navy Yards on the ground, then moved up to the spaceyards for final assembly.
.... OR the yards could be in geosychronous orbit above San Francisco, hence their identification with that particular city. This was the line that Alan Dean Foster took in his 'Star Trek Logs'. As I recall, the Enterprise there was built in pieces in the "old" Navy Yards on the ground, then moved up to the spaceyards for final assembly.
There is no such thing, precisely, as a geosynchronous orbit above San Francisco. Since San Francisco does not lie on the equator, the closest thing to it is an inclined geosynchronous orbit that passes over San Francisco once per sidereal day. A nice picture is at http://newswatch.nationalgeographic.com/2011/05/03/nasa-sun-watching-probe-sees-moon-mountains/.
Ok I've watched the movie many many times and it's always puzzled me how did the enterprise get into space.
Magneto did it.
.... OR the yards could be in geosychronous orbit above San Francisco, hence their identification with that particular city. This was the line that Alan Dean Foster took in his 'Star Trek Logs'. As I recall, the Enterprise there was built in pieces in the "old" Navy Yards on the ground, then moved up to the spaceyards for final assembly.
There is no such thing, precisely, as a geosynchronous orbit above San Francisco. Since San Francisco does not lie on the equator, the closest thing to it is an inclined geosynchronous orbit that passes over San Francisco once per sidereal day. A nice picture is at http://newswatch.nationalgeographic.com/2011/05/03/nasa-sun-watching-probe-sees-moon-mountains/.
.... OR the yards could be in geosychronous orbit above San Francisco, hence their identification with that particular city. This was the line that Alan Dean Foster took in his 'Star Trek Logs'. As I recall, the Enterprise there was built in pieces in the "old" Navy Yards on the ground, then moved up to the spaceyards for final assembly.
There is no such thing, precisely, as a geosynchronous orbit above San Francisco. Since San Francisco does not lie on the equator, the closest thing to it is an inclined geosynchronous orbit that passes over San Francisco once per sidereal day. A nice picture is at http://newswatch.nationalgeographic.com/2011/05/03/nasa-sun-watching-probe-sees-moon-mountains/.
Or it is in a true geosynchronous orbit that lies at the same longitude as San Francisco. They may name the orbit location after the city it's longitude lies closest to.
Helium balloons.Ok I've watched the movie many many times and it's always puzzled me how did the enterprise get into space.
A LOT of ’em.
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