In "Tomorrow Is Yesterday", Kirk orders the tractor beam locked on to Captain Christopher's F-4 Phantom because Spock identifies it as
"A U.S. Air Force interceptor. Possibly armed with nuclear missiles. If he hits us with one it could damage us severely. Possibly beyond our ability to repair under present circumstances".
Now, I know that theoretically you can bolt a nuclear weapon on nearly any aircraft.
But.
The ONLY U.S. Air Force nuclear armed air to air missile was the unguided Genie which had a relatively small nuclear warhead.
IIRC, the F-4 Phantom (which Christophers plane clearly is) was never deployed with the Genie.
Now, you will say "Perhaps Spock didn't know this".
I say he managed to identify the closing aircraft as an "interceptor" correctly despite the F-4 configured for ground attacks looking virtually the same.
Second point.
Couldn't Spock have detected any nuclear missiles aboard Christophers plane with the Enterprise sensors?
I believe that today, in the early 21st century it is already possible to detect nuclear weapons aboard an aircraft or ship at a distance.
So by the late 23rd century, even with the Enterprise sensors degraded by damage and power loss, Spock should've been able to detect any nuclear warheads hanging on the pylons of Christophers plane. Especially as it was closing rapidly on the Enterprise.
Just a small nit and perfectly understandable, but one of the biggest inconsistencies in all of Star Trek (all series) has been how and when sensors work (or don't).
"A U.S. Air Force interceptor. Possibly armed with nuclear missiles. If he hits us with one it could damage us severely. Possibly beyond our ability to repair under present circumstances".
Now, I know that theoretically you can bolt a nuclear weapon on nearly any aircraft.
But.
The ONLY U.S. Air Force nuclear armed air to air missile was the unguided Genie which had a relatively small nuclear warhead.
IIRC, the F-4 Phantom (which Christophers plane clearly is) was never deployed with the Genie.
Now, you will say "Perhaps Spock didn't know this".
I say he managed to identify the closing aircraft as an "interceptor" correctly despite the F-4 configured for ground attacks looking virtually the same.
Second point.
Couldn't Spock have detected any nuclear missiles aboard Christophers plane with the Enterprise sensors?
I believe that today, in the early 21st century it is already possible to detect nuclear weapons aboard an aircraft or ship at a distance.
So by the late 23rd century, even with the Enterprise sensors degraded by damage and power loss, Spock should've been able to detect any nuclear warheads hanging on the pylons of Christophers plane. Especially as it was closing rapidly on the Enterprise.
Just a small nit and perfectly understandable, but one of the biggest inconsistencies in all of Star Trek (all series) has been how and when sensors work (or don't).