So, it's different than a potato clock?
Potatoes can temporarily power snarky, homicidal AI's, dark matter...who knows.
So, it's different than a potato clock?
If you watch the scene where Stamets talks to his buddy and Burnham interrupts - just as Burnham hands the data card over to Stamets, you can see a diagram of the Discovery on the monitor and the outer saucer ring is clearly rotating.
Very interesting. Good catch! That might also explain the image of the Discovery in the press kit, where the registry isn't centered in the middle of the saucer.
Also, the blue outer ring of the greenish inner section is counter-rotating.If you watch the scene where Stamets talks to his buddy and Burnham interrupts - just as Burnham hands the data card over to Stamets, you can see a diagram of the Discovery on the monitor and the outer saucer ring is clearly rotating.
The Fungus isn't non-corporeal. Stamets was brushing fungal dust off his uniform.That part wasn't really the issue.
It's more that he is a mycologist - and some kind of non-corporeal fungus capable of transporting people across space time wouldn't be a fungus at all - i.e. just a a life form as completely mundane as any other with a bit of a different cell to animals and plants.
If they are gonna suggest its a life form with some kinda quantum entanglement going on, or something, it might seem less absurd.
That could make finding your quarters while the ship is at warp a real pain in the arse.If you watch the Episode 4 preview at 0.25x you can see the saucer spinning when the Discovery jumps out into that suns gravity well by tracking her navigational lights. Really interested to see how they use this drive and the whole Speirein level thing.
I don't think it rotates during warp, just during those black alerts and I'd guess during a black alert all personnel on the ship stop where they are at, or move out of moving joints in the ship to more secure areas. Would partly explain why the crew of the Glenn were where they were at as they got twisted up by the rupture. Either way I agree the rotating would get old rather quickly.That could make finding your quarters while the ship is at warp a real pain in the arse.
Would it also affect the ship's normal artificial gravity?I don't think it rotates during warp, just during those black alerts and I'd guess during a black alert all personnel on the ship stop where they are at, or move out of moving joints in the ship to more secure areas. Would partly explain why the crew of the Glenn were where they were at as they got twisted up by the rupture. Either way I agree the rotating would get old rather quickly.
I wouldn't think so since the gravity plates are in the deck and work alongside the inertial dampeners so I'd think the computer would compensate any centripetal force change from the saucer rotating during the jump. Also the jump seems to happen in the matter of a few seconds so again I would think the dampeners alongside probable safeties built into the "Spore Drive" mechanism would prevent any gravitational shifts (unless of course the system fails and you suffer a basidiosac rupture at which point everyone dies to horrific helical torsion more than likely cause by massive subspace shifts). I'm surprised the Glenn looked as good as it did. I would suspect that in reality and if they had invested more time with the CGI model the Glenn's back was probably broken along with many of it's internal support systems so she was probably barely holding together structurally. Minus all of that though I would think as we see during the first Black Alert that gravity remains for the most part unaffected minus of course the weird water lolWould it also affect the ship's normal artificial gravity?
Those navigational lights are moving really fast.If you watch the Episode 4 preview at 0.25x you can see the saucer spinning when the Discovery jumps out into that suns gravity well by tracking her navigational lights. Really interested to see how they use this drive and the whole Speirein level thing.
Agreed at the speed they're rotating the centripetal force would be something close to 4 Earth G's give or take (unless I flubbed my math lol). I'm sure the system safeties and inertial dampeners compensate perfectly fine hence why no one feels anything during a jump, but I'm sure in that split second time frame it's visually quite intense and stunning.Those navigational lights are really moving fast.
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