Hello all! New here, and I'm already in love with this forum. But to the question ...
Many TOS episodes involve Kirk asking Spock something along the lines of "Do sensor readings show any signs of life on this planet?" with Spock's readings often finding no signs of life.
Yet oftentimes, not 10-minutes later we find them on the planet surface observing either plant-life, or (often hostile) humanoid or energy-based life forms.
I know there are TOS episodes where space ship sensor readings have no signs of life, and ultimately prove to the accurate ("The Tholian Web" for one), but I don't recall a planet or planetoid life sensor reading every being accurate when the readings show no signs of life (planetoid being added due to "For the World Is Hollow and I Have Touched the Sky").
Have life sensor readings that deemed a planet as lifeless ever been accurate?
Many TOS episodes involve Kirk asking Spock something along the lines of "Do sensor readings show any signs of life on this planet?" with Spock's readings often finding no signs of life.
Yet oftentimes, not 10-minutes later we find them on the planet surface observing either plant-life, or (often hostile) humanoid or energy-based life forms.
I know there are TOS episodes where space ship sensor readings have no signs of life, and ultimately prove to the accurate ("The Tholian Web" for one), but I don't recall a planet or planetoid life sensor reading every being accurate when the readings show no signs of life (planetoid being added due to "For the World Is Hollow and I Have Touched the Sky").
Have life sensor readings that deemed a planet as lifeless ever been accurate?