Could it be only a few pieces of gravity control hardware were found and that alien tech was impossible to reproduce with tech in the 21 century?
This topic has probably been talked to death, but I had a though occur to me. A nit for many to pick with "Space Seed" is that when Kirk and co. beam over to the Botany Bay(a ship built in the 1990s), the ship has artificial gravity. Kirk and company stand firmly on the deck and glass and other items fall toward the deck. Based on real history and in universe presentation (see the Ares IV) this seems highly improbable.
Ive heard two primary explanations. Earth had artificial gravity in the 1990s, or the Enterprise somehow transferred gravity over. But those aren't the only ways of causing artificial gravity. What if, after the Enterprise tractored the Botany Bay, they started accelerating to provide artificial gravity inside. This would require the internal layout to be sky scraper style, with the floor towards the rear and the ceiling towards the nose; rather than submarine style. But we did see a picture of the DY-100 launched nose up in "Future's End" (VOY).
I'm sure someone else has already though of this. But I've never heard it presented as a theory before, so there you go.
Dr. Crusher said that Clare Raymond died in about 1994. She might have been frozen immediately and placed in the space capsule later, or put into space right after being frozen.but the cryogenic satellite found by the Enterprise-D in "The Neutral Zone" also has artificial gravity, and it is described as a 21st century object.
Ah, so it does fit with Khan's ship better than I thought.Dr. Crusher said that Clare Raymond died in about 1994. She might have been frozen immediately and placed in the space capsule later, or put into space right after being frozen.
So possible the space capsule was equipped with artificial gravity in the late twentieth century.
Khan's golden discotheque outfit was attached to the "floor" of the chamber. No straps required.Khan wouldn't be resting peacefully in his seatbelt-free glass coffin.
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