In which TV or movie was there an example of correct Physics(in our universe) as we know it today?
TNG "Booby Trap", using the gravitational field of an object (asteriod) to increase the speed of a spacecraft (Ent-D).
Well, it would work if you just change the gravity constant of the universe.
Well, it would work if you just change the gravity constant of the universe.
CHANGE THE GRAVITATIONAL CONSTANT OF THE UNIVERSE!!!Well, it would work if you just change the gravity constant of the universe.
What?
When TMP was made they didn't have a specific year in mind, so that's rather impossible.^what would be more impressive is if that is accurate as to where Jupiter will be in that year relative to Earth in that year.
Actually, simple relative motion applies on a scale this small; Enterprise could maneuver relative to spacedock as if both were motionless in space. For those kinds of small maneuvers, for anything above about 1000km orbit it'll take several hours for the differences in their orbits to become apparent.Well, in TMP the Enterprise uses maneuvering thrusters to leave the drydock, which means that the ship is changing its angular momentum in relation to the dock, so the ship either leaves the dock behind or slows down its own orbit enough that the dock pulls away from it.
Where was Jupiter in the movie? I mean, apart from "inside the solar system" which is about as specific as it gets, otherwise its position was never really defined.^what would be more impressive is if that is accurate as to where Jupiter will be in that year relative to Earth in that year.
The .25c thing was a TNG tech manual thing. In TMP it's pretty clear warp point five means half light speed, because—as I noted previously—Jupiter at its farthest from Earth would take 1.8 hours to reach at half lightspeed....Enterprise was either moving at .25C (the purported "full impulse power" of starships) or .5C (as in "warp point five").
Actually, simple relative motion applies on a scale this small; Enterprise could maneuver relative to spacedock as if both were motionless in space. For those kinds of small maneuvers, for anything above about 1000km orbit it'll take several hours for the differences in their orbits to become apparent.Well, in TMP the Enterprise uses maneuvering thrusters to leave the drydock, which means that the ship is changing its angular momentum in relation to the dock, so the ship either leaves the dock behind or slows down its own orbit enough that the dock pulls away from it.
The .25c thing was a TNG tech manual thing. In TMP it's pretty clear warp point five means half light speed, because—as I noted previously—Jupiter at its farthest from Earth would take 1.8 hours to reach at half lightspeed....Enterprise was either moving at .25C (the purported "full impulse power" of starships) or .5C (as in "warp point five").
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