Re: Did you like the new Stardate system?
Perhaps you missed where I postulated in my first post:
If Andoria has an orbit close to 517 days, then the governments of those three worlds could easily adopt Earth's year as standard. Alternatively, we've seen references to a gas giant near Vulcan; if Vulcan orbits that planet and it generates sufficient heat, Vulcan might easily lie outside of the standard habitable zone for a K1 star. That's unlikely given the amount of radiation T'Khut would generate itself, but it's not impossible for an inhabited planet to lie outside of a habitable zone, just less likely.
And the above was mostly pointless, anyway, because I started my whole scenario off with a suggestion that the Vulcans adopted the Earth-standard year for interplanetary relations simply because they felt it made it easier for humans to cope -- an outcome that isn't at all unreasonable given the behavior seen in Enterprise by a species that could easily do the conversions in their heads without pausing in a conversation.
And what is that distance from that red star? 93 million miles, like the Earth's?with a habitable zone very close to the star
what about multiple star systems (such as where Vulcan is located)? Would the habitable zone of a multiple star system be similar distance (or orbit) to Earth's? I doubt it.
Perhaps you missed where I postulated in my first post:
As a low-end class K star, 40 Eridani A (the star most folks agree is the primary of Vulcan) has a habitable zone of .61 AUs and any planet there would orbit in about 203 days. Cooler stars have a habitable zone closer to the star than Earth and warmer stars push it farther out. The Sun is roughly in the middle of the range of stars likely to support life similar to that found here, so it isn't unlikely that the average year among inhabited planets is close to ours.If the Vulcans condescendingly agreed to use Earth years and maybe even 24-hour-days as a standard in the early days before the founding of the UFP, and that standard isn't appreciably different from that shared by other founding members, then it's likely that Earth standards for telling time might become accepted as well.
If Andoria has an orbit close to 517 days, then the governments of those three worlds could easily adopt Earth's year as standard. Alternatively, we've seen references to a gas giant near Vulcan; if Vulcan orbits that planet and it generates sufficient heat, Vulcan might easily lie outside of the standard habitable zone for a K1 star. That's unlikely given the amount of radiation T'Khut would generate itself, but it's not impossible for an inhabited planet to lie outside of a habitable zone, just less likely.
And the above was mostly pointless, anyway, because I started my whole scenario off with a suggestion that the Vulcans adopted the Earth-standard year for interplanetary relations simply because they felt it made it easier for humans to cope -- an outcome that isn't at all unreasonable given the behavior seen in Enterprise by a species that could easily do the conversions in their heads without pausing in a conversation.