Just viewing Parallax.
In this episode, the ship is caught in the event horizon of a quantum singularity. When the crew first sees the singularity, they see a distorted ship at the edge, which they try to pull out using a tractor beam. Later, we learn that Voyager itself has been within the event horizon from the first shock and that the ship we see is nothing but a 'time-delayed reflection' of themselves. This is later reinforced by the notion B'elanna and Janeway have on the shuttle that only one of two very real-looking images of the ship will have any substance to it.
OK, fine so far (ignoring the question of (lack of) realism of physics, of course). But, if there is nothing there, what is the tractor beam they point at the beginning of the episode at this reflection actually locking on to, and why does it have such a serious effect on the ship? Is it simply locking onto the singularity itself?
In this episode, the ship is caught in the event horizon of a quantum singularity. When the crew first sees the singularity, they see a distorted ship at the edge, which they try to pull out using a tractor beam. Later, we learn that Voyager itself has been within the event horizon from the first shock and that the ship we see is nothing but a 'time-delayed reflection' of themselves. This is later reinforced by the notion B'elanna and Janeway have on the shuttle that only one of two very real-looking images of the ship will have any substance to it.
OK, fine so far (ignoring the question of (lack of) realism of physics, of course). But, if there is nothing there, what is the tractor beam they point at the beginning of the episode at this reflection actually locking on to, and why does it have such a serious effect on the ship? Is it simply locking onto the singularity itself?
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