In the novel The Final Reflection, the Klingons are weirded out that Federation transporters make a noise. In TOS the one time we see a Klingon transporter it's silent (although accompanied by a musical sting)
Even if the transporter made a sound, you'd think the Federation and other powers would also invest in developing a 'stealth transporter', a transporter that doesn't give away its action by sound (or unnecessary visuals, or other detectable emissions on the spectrum). Might give a nice tactical advantage in tense situations, even if only for a few seconds.
If a transporter beams equipment into a forest and no one is there, does it make a sound?
The answer is the same as the tree. The "conditions" of its sound is *generated* but that sound is only realized if there's someone or something there that receives it. I was never fooled or perplexed by this mind experiment.
The answer is the same as the tree. The "conditions" of its sound is *generated* but that sound is only realized if there's someone or something there that receives it. I was never fooled or perplexed by this mind experiment.
Well played.
When I've seen productions that don't use sound in space, like Firefly or Cuaron's Gravity, I actually find the lack of sound effects makes them more potent, not less.
If we were talking about the kind of instant teleportation that advanced aliens often used on TOS, like the Metrons or Trelane teleporting Kirk off the bridge in a jump cut, there would logically be a loud thunderclap-type sound as the air rushed into the vacant space, or as the air at the destination was forced out by the subject's arrival (equivalent to how the sound of thunder is created by the intense heat of a lightning bolt causing the air to expand abruptly).
Mostly because it's dumb.The answer is the same as the tree. The "conditions" of its sound is *generated* but that sound is only realized if there's someone or something there that receives it. I was never fooled or perplexed by this mind experiment.
Off-topic, but is Nightcrawler's bamf! due to air displacement then, or is the sound always created as part of his own teleportation process?
If Nightcrawler's powers don't create any sound at all on their own, then is it kind of weird that we hear the same bamf when he both leaves and arrives? Would the sound of air rushing in to fill a void really sound exactly the same as air being compressed to make space? And shouldn't the area in which the bamf takes place affect the sound? Bamfing into an open field would cause less relative compression that into a car, for instance? And how come the sound is the same when he also takes another person with him?
And is the sound known as bamf due to Nightcrawler being a BAMF?
I assume that "BAMF" is the onomatopoeia for a range of distinct air-displacement noises of varying intensity, pitch, etc., in the same way that you can have a large boom or a small boom.
Really, I'm not sure the sound of air being instantaneously forced outward would be that different from the sound of air instantaneously rushing inward. Both would create a sonic shock wave in a similar way.
As a joke, sure, if you like. But in reality, from what I can find, the BAMF acronym didn't catch on until the past decade (though the full phrase dates from the 1970s), so it's just a coincidence.
In 'Blakes Seven', whenever someone teleported there was a very specific musical sting which my brother and I associated so strongly with 'beaming' that whenever we beamed in play we'd sing the little "Bum bum badda da dum!" sting, as though it was in-world.In the novel The Final Reflection, the Klingons are weirded out that Federation transporters make a noise. In TOS the one time we see a Klingon transporter it's silent (although accompanied by a musical sting)
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