if you fall, the holodeck might be able to lower gravity to prevent injury (though why this wouldn't also apply to anywhere else on the ship is another matter)
It's a different power source, incompatible with the rest of the ship.

if you fall, the holodeck might be able to lower gravity to prevent injury (though why this wouldn't also apply to anywhere else on the ship is another matter)
O'Brien throws his shoulder out kayaking at least once. I seem to remember a young woman in TNG sickbay with a swimming injury, although not sure if that was a real pool or holodeck.Or, can you sustain injuries in the first place on the holodeck, even with safeties on ? (Like you can get injured at home, even if that isn't supposed to be dangerous).
Suddenly I find myself picturing a scene with Neelix limping off the holodeck with a sprained ankle, complaining to the computer how he could have gotten injured while the safeties were on, only to be told by it that it cannot compensate for that level of clumsiness.
Yup, the very first appearance of the holodeck shows that people who get wet inside it are still wet when they walk out the door.
It's not hard to guess. Variable gravity.How on earth cliff diving should be possible in the rather smallish holodeck we see is anybody's guess.
It's not hard to guess. Variable gravity.
Yep, and it's worth mentioning/clarifying that the whole concept of relative elevation in the holodeck is generally artificial. Two people might be standing side by side on the holodeck and yet perceive that one of them is 100 meters higher up than the other. If you start climbing the ladder to that holo-diving board you mention, you needn't go up very far above the deck level, as the computer can shift the virtual ground downward from your perspective and in your space for each rung you climb.Yep, same reason Torres was able to do an orbital dive in the VOY ep where she goes all death-wishy over the rest of the Maquis back home getting slaughtered by the Dominion.
Computer builds a holo-"diving board" in the terrain that gets you some elevation. You jump. Computer uses the artificial gravity to essentially put you in a floating state but generates wind effects (via forcefields) and noise around you whilst updating the scenery to make you seem to be falling.
Yep, and it's worth mentioning/clarifying that the whole concept of relative elevation in the holodeck is generally artificial. Two people might be standing side by side on the holodeck and yet perceive that one of them is 100 meters higher up than the other. If you start climbing the ladder to that holo-diving board you mention, you needn't go up very far above the deck level, as the computer can shift the virtual ground downward from your perspective and in your space for each rung you climb.
How would the holodeck cope if a number of people brought a real inflexible measuring rod (except at the joints) (from outside the holodeck) with them and tried to extend it to a distance larger than the diameter of the holodeck, all the while having observers guard each section of it so that the holodeck could pull no tricks there?
How would the holodeck cope if a number of people brought a real inflexible measuring rod (except at the joints) (from outside the holodeck) with them and tried to extend it to a distance larger than the diameter of the holodeck, all the while having observers guard each section of it so that the holodeck could pull no tricks there?
We use essential cookies to make this site work, and optional cookies to enhance your experience.