I’m not sure, long tons maybe. Where did you get those numbers? Neither is the close to a “million gross tons” said by Scott on-screen.170000-190000 English or metric tons?
I’m not sure, long tons maybe. Where did you get those numbers? Neither is the close to a “million gross tons” said by Scott on-screen.170000-190000 English or metric tons?
In the STD episode "Brother", the Enterprise's gross tonnage was given as 190,000 metric tons on a graphic.
This part of Court Martial is a bit confusing.Probably correct, a low orbit.
The Naked Time, maybe not a good example because the planet was compacting mucking up gravity and magnetic fields.
SPOCK: Captain. At our present rate of descent, we have less than twenty minutes before we enter planet atmosphere.Court Martial, the best example, which takes about 20 minutes or so once Kirk shuts down the impulse engines until his repairs:
KIRK: Our impulse engines have been shut down. We'll maintain orbit by momentum.
KRASNOVSKY: And when the orbit decays?
KIRK: We hope to be finished long before that.
(and later)
KIRK [OC]: The damage he'd caused was considerable, but not irreparable. With luck, I would be able to effect repairs before our orbit decayed completely.
I forgot about Mirror, Mirror. I agree with your analysis. After "loitering" for transporting, they must have maneuvered into a low natural orbit (fairly fast moving based on targets coming and going) to incrementally approach upon multiple targets for planet-wide bombardment.Not that a figure-eight would be the only option. But it may still be the standard one: when our heroes are aboard a ship that is about to lose a phaser target to the approaching horizon in "Mirror, Mirror", they are not established to be in standard orbit at the time, say. Although quite possibly they were on one when Kirk and the party were planetside...
KIRK: Kirk to Enterprise.
SPOCK [OC]: Spock here, Captain.
KIRK: Proceed immediately to maximum orbit.
SPOCK [OC]: Acknowledged.
GARROVICK: Just think, Captain, less than one ounce of antimatter here is more powerful than ten thousand cobalt bombs.
KIRK: Let's hope it's as powerful as man will ever get. Detonator.
GARROVICK: Aye, sir.
(He primes and sets it on the anti-grav unit.)
KIRK: Kirk to Enterprise.
[Bridge]
SPOCK: Spock here, Captain. Holding at thirty thousand kilometres.
So, Enterprise is in an orbit, and it is maintained to beam Lincoln up as the Enterprise moves over to his position. After Lincoln's tour of the bridge, we learn:SULU: All observation stations, take final readings. This'll be our last orbit.
...
SULU: Completing final orbit, sir.
KIRK: Prepare to warp us out.
...
KIRK: We'd be honoured to have you aboard, Mister President.
LINCOLN [on viewscreen]: Do you still measure time in minutes?
KIRK: We can convert to it, sir.
LINCOLN [on viewscreen]: Then you should be directly over my position in. There. Exactly twelve and one half minutes. Until then, Captain.
Then, Enterprise changes orbit to beam down:KIRK: Yes, if I recall, your Union Army observation balloons were tendered six hundred or so feet high. We're six hundred and forty three miles above the surface of this planet.
LINCOLN: You can measure great distances that closely?
SPOCK: We do, sir. Six hundred forty three miles, two thousand twenty one feet, two point zero four inches at this moment, using your old-style measurements.
Enterprise seemed to change orbit to "dwell" over the transport site. Since it is synchronous, no power is needed for station keeping (for at least four hours on reserve power):SCOTT: Transporter room to bridge. Standing by.
CHEKOV [OC]: We are now locked in synchronous orbit, Mister Scott. Sensors continue to show the area as completely Earth-like in all respects.
And at the end, Kirk and Spock are beamed up apparently with no orbit change:SULU: Bridge to Engineering. Come in. What's happening to our power? Bridge to Engineering, report.
ENGINEER [OC]: Everything's out. We've switched to reserve power. Lost all power in the warp engines.
...
KIRK: Scotty, beam us up fast.
[Bridge]
SCOTT: I cannot. We have a complete power failure.
[Planet surface]
SCOTT [OC]: We're on emergency battery power only.
KIRK: What happened?
[Bridge]
SCOTT: I can't explain it, sir, but the matter and antimatter are in red zone proximity.
KIRK [OC]: What caused that?
SCOTT: There's no knowing and there's no stopping it either. The shielding is breaking down. I estimate four hours before it goes completely. Four hours before the ship blows up.
KIRK: Yes, Mister Sulu. We're all right. You may beam us aboard.
KIRK: Yes, if I recall, your Union Army observation balloons were tendered six hundred or so feet high. We're six hundred and forty three miles above the surface of this planet.
LINCOLN: You can measure great distances that closely?
SPOCK: We do, sir. Six hundred forty three miles, two thousand twenty one feet, two point zero four inches at this moment, using your old-style measurements.
The one deorbit scenario that really annoys me, even allowing for drama and plot convenience, is in "Into Darkness". The Enterprise in near orbit of the Moon next to the Vengence, and when her main power starts to fail, is suddenly in imminent peril from burning up in Earths' atmosphere!
WTF? Even allowing for dodgy Star Trek 'drama physics', that's just a 'd'oh' moment!![]()
Yeah, travel times in the Kelvin universe are even more messed up than any of the TOS examples!At that point in the movie, I've already been defeated by the fact that the Enterprise is forced out of warp closer to Earth than they probably should've decelerated on their own, and yet it's still treated as if they've been prevented from reaching their destination.
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