The occasional dead hooker.With the party example I gave, there would be food of course, but possibly also plates and utensils, decorations, wrapping material for gifts, etc.
Well, in my sandwich from garbage disposal example, I'm thinking more along the lines of getting a sandwich from the same place you just got rid of last night's spoiled hollandaise sauce or whatever, not where you just took a dump. But neither case is something you'd probably want to think about.Edit 2: Apparently, that doesn't mean what I thought it did. So, merely beaten to the punch.
Wasn't there a line in that one TNG episode with the racially insensitive portrayal of simple 'Irish' folk that mentioned that the ship was "self cleaning?"
In the ENT era, there are only basic protein resequencers as far as replication goes. We can assume that these systems are not complex enough to break down garbage into something usable because said system would be incapable of making anything with the broken down material. Therefore, waste is handled much as it is today. It is collected in baskets and then taken to a dedicated facility, perhaps where it is converted into a source of power.
In the TOS era, replicator technology is not present on starships (although food synthesizers were) but were used in industrial applications. It stands to reason that garbage was collected in baskets in the bathrooms of each cabin, and then either the crew member assigned to the cabin or a crew member who had been assigned trash duty would collect it in some centralized place. When the ship next docked at a location which had the replicator technology required to process the garbage, they would unload it all.
I don't think there would have been any energy recovered from feeding the pocket watch back into the replicator, rather energy would have been expended in order to recycle the watch.As shown in VOY when Janeway orders Chakotay to scrap the watch he was giving her for a birthday present in order to recover the spent energy, the conversion of matter back into energy recovers a significant amount of power which was used to make the object
I don't think there would have been any energy recovered from feeding the pocket watch back into the replicator, rather energy would have been expended in order to recycle the watch.As shown in VOY when Janeway orders Chakotay to scrap the watch he was giving her for a birthday present in order to recover the spent energy, the conversion of matter back into energy recovers a significant amount of power which was used to make the object
I believe that Janeway's concern was the public image of the first officer giving the captain a replicated item for her birthday while the ship was on limited power and replicator restrictions. It wouldn't look good in the eyes of the crew, senior officers having a separate set of rules. IIRC, Chakotay created the watch prior to the (then) current emergency, but that made no difference to Janeway.
Chakotay would have saved the ship power by not recycling the watch, which is what he did, although likely not for that reason.
If the replicator was capable of generating energy by consuming material, the ship wouldn't ever be in short supply of power. Perhaps not enough to power the warp drive, but simply by feeding it random debris the replicator would be self-powering.
Which it isn't.
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She wouldn't have said that the watch could "mean the difference between life and death" if she were simply doing it symbolically.VOY: Year of Hell
(Chakotay holds out a pocket watch. He is growing a moustache and beard.)
CHAKOTAY: Happy birthday.
JANEWAY: Happy what?
CHAKOTAY: Today is May twentieth.
JANEWAY: Is it? I thought we were still in April. Guess I've lost track of the time.
CHAKOTAY: Well, this should help.
JANEWAY: It's beautiful.
CHAKOTAY: Nineteenth century, mechanical movement. It's a replica of the chronometer worn by Captain Cray of the British Navy, His ship was hit by a typhoon in the Pacific. Everyone back in England thought they were killed, but eight months later Cray sailed his ship into London harbour. There wasn't much left of it, a few planks, half a sail, but he got his crew home.
JANEWAY: I appreciate the sentiment, but I can't keep this. Recycle it. We can't afford to waste energy on nonessentials.
CHAKOTAY: Kathryn, I replicated this months ago. I've been saving it. I wanted you to have it.
JANEWAY: That watch represents a meal, a hypospray, or a pair of boots. It could mean the difference between life and death one day.
Federation starships always dump their trash just before the jump to hyperspace...The system doesn't need to make anything with the waste, though. Assuming the power required was low enough to allow its use, you could have a system which is simply designed to break down the trash and transport it to a collection point (or just outside the ship) without requiring the crew to waste their time dragging trash around the ship.
Janeway: That watch represents a meal, a hypospray, or a ...... why weren't they recycling all the decorative art aboard during YoH? Got a chair in your office for visitors? Get rid of it and make them stand.
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