I don't remember- was the purpose of the BOP attacks on the Outposts designed to provoke a response so they could test the current state of the art Federation ship or were they just caught in the act?
The "there ain't no stealth in space" thing is nonsense: you can always cheat thermodynamics to hide your signature long enough to gain a tactical edge. There's no need to worry about absolutes.
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Timo Saloniemi
This is one of the (many) reasons I see Star Trek as more of science fantasy than science fiction.
The Romulans (in general) seemed to have such a low opinion of how far the Federation (or Earth) could have advanced that they felt reasonably confident they could take on anything they encountered. The destruction of the outposts was indeed a "throwing down of the gauntlet" that couldn't be ignored. But in the end all they could hope for was the element of surprise.I don't remember- was the purpose of the BOP attacks on the Outposts designed to provoke a response so they could test the current state of the art Federation ship or were they just caught in the act?
It's a submarine movie. Those near misses are the depth charges the destroyer drops into the water detonating and damaging the sub even if it's not a direct hit.It seems Kirk wasn't actually scoring hits on the Romulans, but "near misses". Those are relevant in naval warfare, where water carries the explosive energies, and a shell falling close to a ship may in fact be much deadlier than a shell falling onto a ship.
In space warfare, especially in Trek, near misses probably shouldn't have shaken plaster out of the ceiling of the Romulan ship. But they did... Yet this is a bit different from Kirk actually scoring hits.
Also, remember at one point the two ships were in silent mode. But Spock accidentally sent out a distress signal. That gave away the Enterprise's position. Despite this advantage, it was the Enterprise that managed to keep hitting the bird-of-prey with its phasers and without the Romulans firing a shot back.
Now, this makes one wonder if Spock wanted to warn the Romulans so that they could escape - either hoping that this would avert war, or then (considering his aggressive statements earlier) that this would ignite war and the Romulans could be wiped out once and for all.
But by sending that signal, Spock actually made the Romulans come closer, which sealed their fate. It wasn't an advantage for the Romulans, but their undoing!
Timo Saloniemi
Spacecraft need to be hot and heat has to go somewhere, meaning you will always be detectable by fairly trivial technologies. Unless you happen to be able to maneuver to keep yourself directly between the sun and your target and hope he misses you in the glare. But you don't get to "cheat thermodynamics." Sorry.
Kirk couldn't let the Romulans escape with what they learned of Federation capabilities.
But the Romulan Commander also realized he couldn't return home with what they'd learned.
Hmm... How much later? The subsequent TOS episodes mentioning the Romulans were still both of the "We meet again - and we reserve the right to kill you at will again!" type. Nothing civilized about any of it: if the old treaty was mentioned, then merely in the context that it provides an excuse for the Romulans to kill Kirk, completely ignoring the fact that it also allows Kirk to kill the Romulans who are clearly the ones who were at fault first.We saw later there were normalized diplomacy between the Romulans and the Federation.
If so, it's not as if anything Kirk did or left undone would have mattered one iota. The Praetor could use both victory and defeat to launch the conflict; what transpired might in fact be his wettest dream ever, as it demonstrated the factual might of the Romulan military against Earth defenses while providing the casus belli, depending on which half of the mission the propagandists chose to play up.Listening to the way the Romulan Commander and the Centurion were talking it seemed pretty clear the Praetor wanted war.
But you don't get to "cheat thermodynamics."
Sure I do. I have a fridge right here.
Yet that's all I need to hide my spacecraft from the enemy.Don't be facetious. A refrigerator doesn't "cheat" thermodynamics.
Obviously, it would not. Radiating heat into anything else might reveal my position. But in vacuum, heat won't make any sudden U-turns. If I emit it away from the enemy, it will never reach the IR sensors of the enemy. Never.As for that wealth of environment you imagine could be used to hide your ship's waste heat, radiating heat into a vacuum, or dumping heat into some kind of medium, such as a gas or plasma, would also point directly back to you.
I'd much prefer if the writer of the Atomic Rocket site got either a good grasp of physics or an imagination, and preferably a combination of the two. He seems to have a massive blind spot here for some reason.Or perhaps you want to feed us some technobabble about how your ship's reactors, engine and exhaust are hidden through a fold into another dimension?
Which is a separate issue from Atomic Rockets having their physics all screwed up. There's nothing theoretically impossible about being tactically stealthy in space. And being optically perfectly invisible / transparent isn't one of the requirements for that, although something close to that could probably be relatively easily arranged.I think most tech-savvy viewers understand that gimmicks like the cloaking device are allegorical (e.g. submarine warfare), and should not be taken literally.
Don't be facetious. A refrigerator doesn't "cheat" thermodynamics.
After all, what I need is a cold face to present to the enemy.
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Obviously, it would not. Radiating heat into anything else might reveal my position. But in vacuum, heat won't make any sudden U-turns. If I emit it away from the enemy, it will never reach the IR sensors of the enemy. Never.
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If I dump the heat in a medium, I can always create a separation between that medium and myself, eliminating all chance of tracking down where that medium came from. The medium can present a stealthy face for the time it takes to create this separation, just as my ship itself can.
Alternately, I can send the medium away from the enemy in the shadow of my vessel, so again the heat will not reach his sensors. Not until after it leaves the shadow, which is not as good going as with the simple radiating-away trick, or with the laying of refigerated heat-eggs, but still allows me to remain tactically stealthy.
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Timo Saloniemi
Warp speed takes place in subspace. Has since TOS.
That's what I remember. The first mention of warp drive in subspace for TOS that I can recall is in James Blish's novel Spock Must Die. And that's definitely post TOS.Warp speed takes place in subspace. Has since TOS.
I don't know about since TOS. If you have a reference, I'd love to see it, as I recall none. But certainly since TNG. It has repeatedly and explicitly been stated that warp drive operates on a principle of nested bubbles of subspace energy.
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