Umm. Sorry about the earlier outburst. A couple of things I'd like to argue about, while acknowledging that there's a dogmatic schism between our approaches here.
That doesn't make any sense. Sound certainly is energy in the sense that it carries the ability to do work from A to B. In this, it is in no way different from EM radiation. The fact that sound works through a medium and EM radiation travels through vacuum is completely unrelated to this basic issue.
Again, "energy beam" is mumbo jumbo. It's not a well-defined concept of physics, it's a generic expression that can perfectly well be applied to coherent sonic beams, or to soliton-type EM waves (which require a limiting medium), or to EM waves permeating through a medium, or to a Tesla-style death ray that merely sends electric current or charged particles through a medium.
This is 100% wrong, of course. Remove the "not" and you have a true sentence.
So why are you arguing about this? This is a forum for arguing about Trek as if it were real.
All your arguments become invalid here if they only apply to a universe that isn't the Trek one. You lose all credibility if you claim that raised plywood platforms lit from below cannot make hybrids of two humanoid species teleport from a FTL-capable starship to an amazingly Earth-like planet in a matter of seconds. It's absurd to start claiming, then, that some teeny weeny detail like the visual effect for phaser beams should conform to different rules of "realism" than the above mundane occurrence.
"Demons"/"Terra Prime" is a good example. Or TNG "The Emissary". The latter deals with distances that are merely stated to be that long, while the former deals with distances that in the real world are established to be that long. But of course, all of Star Trek is just one big plot hole for you, so pointing to clear evidence is futile.
You're fighting the wrong fight here. The incident perfectly establishes that phaserlike beams travel at warp, so you either have to back off from your contrary claim, or cry "plot hole" once again. Either way, you've lost that fight.
The incident incidentally also establishes that said FTL beams can be perfectly aimed at a stationary target.
What it doesn't establish is whether said FTL beams could hit a FTL target. But that's a whole different fight. And save for TNG, each of the spinoffs so far has featured a warp chase where fire is accurately exchanged, so the only teeny weeny uncertainty here is the degree of speed differential across which these FTL beams still accurately hit their targets.
It makes very little sense that a beam that nicely hits a stationary target from high warp would be unable to hit a target at low warp from high warp. What changes?
They are relevant and frequently and verifiably used in noncombat situations, such as getting realtime info on distant planets and stars. It would be pretty weird if they didn't get used in combat as well, then - even if other factors lead to point-blank combat being the preferred method of fighting.
Oh, and a couple of older points:
You've watched too much Top Gun, probably. Taking an F-14 to dogfight like that would in reality be a court martial offense. It's the third world fighters without BVR weapons that still do some degree of dogfighting. Those, and the fighters from richer nations that operate under limiting rules of engagement, in what the nations insist on defining as peacetime, even though it costs them soldier lives.
Ignoring? How? I perfectly well acknowledge that Trek starships fight at distances of a few ship-lengths. I just don't pick and choose - so I also acknowledge that they fight at high warp, or across astronomical units, or sometimes within atmospheres or even underwater. None of that has any persuading power against the observed fact that phasers travel at all sorts of speeds.
Remember, your argument of lightspeed phasers hinges on assumptions about the nature of phasers. Which is the same thing you accuse me of doing: taking the described fictional universe too seriously or literally. The only piece of evidence that you have for lightspeed phasers is a piece of dialogue that establishes them as "coherent energy beams". Never mind that you are mistaken about the idea that in the real world this would dictate lightspeed beams - the point is that you are trusting the fictional universe, basing a (rather pretty) house of cards on it, on something that is leading you to deep, deep trouble as regards both the real world and the burden of fictional evidence on the issue. Why not stop digging that pit? Why not accept that this piece of dialogue in a work of fiction doesn't dictate your life choices, or override a pile of other pieces from the same work of fiction?
Timo Saloniemi
No. Sound isn't energy, sound is an application of energy, as air/water/solids are a medium through which that energy passes.
That doesn't make any sense. Sound certainly is energy in the sense that it carries the ability to do work from A to B. In this, it is in no way different from EM radiation. The fact that sound works through a medium and EM radiation travels through vacuum is completely unrelated to this basic issue.
Again, "energy beam" is mumbo jumbo. It's not a well-defined concept of physics, it's a generic expression that can perfectly well be applied to coherent sonic beams, or to soliton-type EM waves (which require a limiting medium), or to EM waves permeating through a medium, or to a Tesla-style death ray that merely sends electric current or charged particles through a medium.
Not all waves are composed of energy.
This is 100% wrong, of course. Remove the "not" and you have a true sentence.
Confused, timo? Neither of us have ever "seen" a phaser beam, because phasers aren't real.
So why are you arguing about this? This is a forum for arguing about Trek as if it were real.
All your arguments become invalid here if they only apply to a universe that isn't the Trek one. You lose all credibility if you claim that raised plywood platforms lit from below cannot make hybrids of two humanoid species teleport from a FTL-capable starship to an amazingly Earth-like planet in a matter of seconds. It's absurd to start claiming, then, that some teeny weeny detail like the visual effect for phaser beams should conform to different rules of "realism" than the above mundane occurrence.
When has Star Trek ever ACTUALLY depicted the kind of distance that would make such a thing visible?
"Demons"/"Terra Prime" is a good example. Or TNG "The Emissary". The latter deals with distances that are merely stated to be that long, while the former deals with distances that in the real world are established to be that long. But of course, all of Star Trek is just one big plot hole for you, so pointing to clear evidence is futile.
Irrelevant, since ENTERPRISE was not traveling at warp.
You're fighting the wrong fight here. The incident perfectly establishes that phaserlike beams travel at warp, so you either have to back off from your contrary claim, or cry "plot hole" once again. Either way, you've lost that fight.
The incident incidentally also establishes that said FTL beams can be perfectly aimed at a stationary target.
What it doesn't establish is whether said FTL beams could hit a FTL target. But that's a whole different fight. And save for TNG, each of the spinoffs so far has featured a warp chase where fire is accurately exchanged, so the only teeny weeny uncertainty here is the degree of speed differential across which these FTL beams still accurately hit their targets.
It makes very little sense that a beam that nicely hits a stationary target from high warp would be unable to hit a target at low warp from high warp. What changes?
You still have to deal with the question of whether FTL sensors are even relevant in a universe where starships don't fight at relativistic speeds or relativistic velocities.
They are relevant and frequently and verifiably used in noncombat situations, such as getting realtime info on distant planets and stars. It would be pretty weird if they didn't get used in combat as well, then - even if other factors lead to point-blank combat being the preferred method of fighting.
Oh, and a couple of older points:
BOMBERS do. Fighters that can't dogfight aren't fighters, they're just targets.
You've watched too much Top Gun, probably. Taking an F-14 to dogfight like that would in reality be a court martial offense. It's the third world fighters without BVR weapons that still do some degree of dogfighting. Those, and the fighters from richer nations that operate under limiting rules of engagement, in what the nations insist on defining as peacetime, even though it costs them soldier lives.
Which again forces me to ask: if you're taking VFX that literally, why are you conveniently ignoring the ludicrously close ranges starships appear to fight at anyway?
Ignoring? How? I perfectly well acknowledge that Trek starships fight at distances of a few ship-lengths. I just don't pick and choose - so I also acknowledge that they fight at high warp, or across astronomical units, or sometimes within atmospheres or even underwater. None of that has any persuading power against the observed fact that phasers travel at all sorts of speeds.
Remember, your argument of lightspeed phasers hinges on assumptions about the nature of phasers. Which is the same thing you accuse me of doing: taking the described fictional universe too seriously or literally. The only piece of evidence that you have for lightspeed phasers is a piece of dialogue that establishes them as "coherent energy beams". Never mind that you are mistaken about the idea that in the real world this would dictate lightspeed beams - the point is that you are trusting the fictional universe, basing a (rather pretty) house of cards on it, on something that is leading you to deep, deep trouble as regards both the real world and the burden of fictional evidence on the issue. Why not stop digging that pit? Why not accept that this piece of dialogue in a work of fiction doesn't dictate your life choices, or override a pile of other pieces from the same work of fiction?
Timo Saloniemi