A comet's tail is caused by outgassing from the body caused by heating from a star. The tail is caused by solar wind pushing the created atmosphere out away from the star. Without the star the comet would just be a block of ice.
The way I always interpreted the comet was that it was symbolism for one of the marketing taglines used when DS9 started. "At the edge of the Final Frontier" or something like that. We see the comet representing space exploration, or the "Final Frontier." Then the camera moves past that to, at first empty space, then showing the station in the distance, to represent we have moved to the "edge of the Final Frontier" as suggested by the tagline.
Wasn't there a comet in the opening credits season 3 and on, the one where we see one approaching the galaxy.
If things we saw in openings like VOY represent traveling through space why can't a comet represent being in a stationary location? After all don't need a star to have a comet?
Clearly not a galaxy, because it's rotating. A galaxy would have to be sped up millions of times to show any appreciable rotation; no comets or other such objects could be seen in the same shot.
It's likely to be part of the "story" being told in the TNG opening credits instead. First, there's this nondescript nebula. Then, it condenses into a star system (which is what we see rotating there, with comets plummeting in to provide more matter, water, panspermic beginnings of life, what have you). Then, planets form. And then comes civilization, with starships.
I've seen people talking about the comet containing the face of Spock before. I've looked. And I've looked. And I've looked. And I can't see it.
Where the frell is it?
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