Europa.Wait. Which moon had the monolith?

Europa.Wait. Which moon had the monolith?
Good question since both the moon's departure AND the discovery of the monolith took place in 1999!Wait. Which moon had the monolith?
The warp engine imbalance wormhole in TMP pulled in an asteriod and presumably moved it at superluminal velocities. Seems like similar wormholes could have been responsible for various things being hundreds of light years further away than they should be.It does seem that a lot of early probes and such were given quite the boost by some phenomena...
Theoretically, a black star is not quite a black hole:Or, we could use the old Chris Bennett excuse (based on Tomorrow is Yesterday) that there's a black star (black hole) out in the Oort Cloud somewhere swallowing up all of our probes and spitting them out elsewhere, in time and space.
I'm not convinced that that distinction between black star and black hole existed when "Tomorrow Is Yesterday" was written.Theoretically, a black star is not quite a black hole:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Black_star_(semiclassical_gravity)
Well, regardless of whatever happens in the real world, in TMP Kirk et al. explicitly said otherwise. So, Star Trek black holes don't necessary behave like real ones [http://www.chakoteya.net/movies/movie1.html]:Black holes are a one way to oblivion; they don't spit you out like a wormhole.
Good point, and the idea that maybe Voyager 6 had a near-light-speed booster is interesting. Indeed, why wouldn't that type of tech be considered, if Earth was launching DY-100 class ships around the same time with similar tech?Unless Voyager VI used an advanced drive, even after 300 years of travel before it fell into the mythical near-Earth black hole, it would only be ~1200 AU (0.019 lys) from Earth. That's mighty close for a black hole not to be detected by its gravity effects on our solar system. It would be gobbling up our Oort Cloud. Maybe the Voyager VI used a near-light speed booster similar to the Botany Bay's ion particle drive. Then the black hole could be many, many lightyears from Earth.
But that’s not how the BoP scene is played. Klaa and his crew are bored stiff, on an uncloaked ship, relieving the monotony by taking potshots at space junk. This is not the act of someone who is trying to test Earth’s defenses or conducting an intelligence gathering mission. And he’s not even trying to get the Federation’s attention, if in fact they are supposed to be right outside the Solar System, relatively speaking.
Of course, since this movie postulates that both a Constitution class starship and a BoP can effectively travel to the center of the galaxy in about an hour...
I've never bought into the idea that Kirk kept the whole Khan affair secret. What would his original motivation be? Plus McGivers was gone from his crew, this would have to of been accounted for.
It's impossible to run a capital ship and keep what you do and where the ship goes a secret from headquarters. A PT boat with five men, maybe. But not a big ship. And that's not even to mention the automatic computer logs and sensor logs the Enterprise has, and even today's Navy ships surely have.
Well, a madman said this would be done. Kirk insisted it couldn't. Who's Kirk to contradict a madman who's in total control of not just his ship but his crew, too?
Or Japetus / Iapetus.Europa.![]()
All Sybok said was that the Enterprise would be able to pass through the Great Barrier.
Apparently, Phobos has an interesting one, too... For real. Also see Reynolds.
Well, not quite. Sybok brought up the idea of going to the center of the Milky Way. Kirk shot that down by saying "Hey, you can't even attempt to try - the Great Barrier is in the way!". And then Sybok said "Do not worry, faith will provide in that respect." Just about the right time for Kirk to shut up and stop contradicting the madman.
So quite possibly nobody traveled thousands of lightyears. Instead, the two ships reached the Great Barrier, a few hours' sailing from Nimbus; didn't stop there, unlike most of their predecessors who had been deterred by this whole nobody-comes-back thing; and ended up meeting God. Who, for all we know, was sleeping just beyond the outer surface of the Barrier, not particularly far away from Sol, despite Sybok's delusions to the contrary.
(Alternately, meeting God involved a Cytheran superdrive, which would take over from the ships' own warp drives at Great Barrier entry, and indeed whisk the ships to the center of the galaxy. But that's hardly a requirement.)
Timo Saloniemi
From the get-go I have always wondered if “The Great Barrier” in TFF got confused/misremembered with the barrier at the edge of the galaxy from TOS. They git away with the concept in WNMHGB and “By Any Other Name,” but going back to the idea always struck me as silly. If the had stuck with the idea of trying to get beyond the barrier at the galaxy’s at least it would have been something they had already established. But giving us another “great barrier” struck me as dumb.
The energy barrier in WNMHGB and BAON also appears in "Is There in Truth No Beauty?". It is mentioned in dialog [http://www.chakoteya.net/StarTrek/62.htm]:From the get-go I have always wondered if “The Great Barrier” in TFF got confused/misremembered with the barrier at the edge of the galaxy from TOS. They git away with the concept in WNMHGB and “By Any Other Name,” but going back to the idea always struck me as silly. If the had stuck with the idea of trying to get beyond the barrier at the galaxy’s at least it would have been something they had already established. But giving us another “great barrier” struck me as dumb.
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