I'm thinking the moon couldn't be terraforned, as it has insufficient gravity to hold on to an atmosphere.
Same for Mars. They have artificial gravity, so who knows what you get when you play around with that... but planets are awfully big.
I'm thinking the moon couldn't be terraforned, as it has insufficient gravity to hold on to an atmosphere.
There is another mention in Voyager, in Death Wish. When Q is sending the ship to random hiding spots one of them is in a Christmas Tree.Christmas is mentioned on the Voyager episode, Survival Instinct with Janeway's prehensile tree. Can anyone name another episode or movie from any series where Christmas is mentioned?
I recall that. One of them said, "We seem to be tethered to some large plant".There is another mention in Voyager, in Death Wish. When Q is sending the ship to random hiding spots one of them is in a Christmas Tree.
The Borg are greedyWhat if some alien species shipped off their worst criminals to the Borg, instead if executing them? Could be a tidy arrangement to spare the rest of their species from assimilation.
When I heard that line in First Contact, I assumed it all might have been under a really big dome. Or maybe several smaller domes.
That might be like the TOS Enterprise had (supposed) landing gear, those triangle shapes on the underside of the saucer, so the ship could made a one time emergency landing on a planet.
So maybe the Defiant would be able to land ... once.
I always thouht the Intrepid class looked well suited to land, the design looks very aerodynamicThe defiant being shaped like it is seems more plausible of being able to land and take off than the intrepid class
It always looked to me like those 2 landing struts on the rear section of the ship, would not have been enough to keep the saucer section from tipping forward when it was parked on a planet.I always thouht the Intrepid class looked well suited to land, the design looks very aerodynamic
it does look like the saucer wants to tip forward...but it's possible that since the "engine" is in the back of the ship that there's enough weight on that end to keep it from tipping. (or something like that)It always looked to me like those 2 landing struts on the rear section of the ship, would not have been enough to keep the saucer section from tipping forward when it was parked on a planet.
He probably didn't. Tom is a better pilot and landing a ship isn't something that is done very often by anyone.Did anyone else think that when Chakotay was the one that had to land the ship on the Demon Class planet, that he didn't set it down quite as gently as when Tom was the pilot?
I wondered as well if it might have been the nature of the planet they were landing on in that instance. Some kind of instability of the ground surface. But if you ever watch it, it looks like the landing struts almost buckle.He probably didn't. Tom is a better pilot and landing a ship isn't something that is done very often by anyone.
I don't know if they almost buckle or they just bend to absorb some impactI wondered as well if it might have been the nature of the planet they were landing on in that instance. Some kind of instability of the ground surface. But if you ever watch it, it looks like the landing struts almost buckle.
it does look like the saucer wants to tip forward...but it's possible that since the "engine" is in the back of the ship that there's enough weight on that end to keep it from tipping. (or something like that)
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