They kind of are. I repeat: if there's something on that planet that would render it uninhabitable in the time it takes for light to travel a few light years... hell, you're in an escape pod, it's not like you have a wide selection of choice landing sites. Your only real options boil down to "put phaser to head, pull trigger" and "pray real hard we get rescued before the talking apes lobotomize us all."Oh sure, nuclear war among it's inhabitants or THIS IS CETI ALPHA 5!! are virtual impossibilities![]()
Heck, if you are in an escape pod then help is coming to you - not the other way around


No, I was talking about a ship in trouble and needing a planet to shelter or what not or for looking for a specific item that could help them. For that, real-time (or FTL) sensors would be useful. Not years old sensor data.
On that note, it's worth keeping in mind that Kirk's FTL sensors didn't exactly warn him that Ceti Alpha Six was about to explode for no apparent reason.
Sure - but we don't know if they were just looking for a planet that's gonna explode. We just knew that Spock found a "habitable, although a bit savage, somewhat inhospitable" planet. For all we know, a giant high speed asteroid ala "The Paradise Syndrome" smashed into Ceti Alpha VI and blew it up which wouldn't have shown up on any initial survey of the sixth planet.
So keep in mind that in Star Trek, cataclysmic events can happen in any short period of time. Realistic? Probably not. But this is Star Trek
