This may be a dumb question, but does anyone have any idea what the J.T. in J.T. Esteban stands for? It seems a little odd that they'd give him the same first initials as James T. Kirk.
As for Esteban, following on from Christopher's suggestions... perhaps his first name is Jesus (hay-SUUS), but he goes by J.T. because he's tired of everyone calling him JEE-zus.
The Officer's Manual also completely screwed up the calculation of how much energy would be released by the annihilation of a given quantity of antimatter, but that's the sort of thing only a physics major would notice. I think they claimed that "Arena"-style photon grenades had an antimatter payload of something like a kilogram, or some quantity so excessive that it would be enough to raze a continent rather than just cause a localized explosion. I know, one shouldn't expect too much scientific accuracy from something like this, but still, the math is extremely simple -- E = mc^2 -- so it shouldn't have been that hard to figure out the actual proportions instead of just pulling some random number out of the air.
KIRK: Antimatter seems our only possibility.
SPOCK: An ounce should be sufficient. We can drain it from the ship's engines and transport it to the planet surface in a magnetic vacuum field.
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.
SPOCK: There is still one problem, Captain.
KIRK: The blast, yes.
SPOCK: Exactly. A matter-antimatter blast will rip away half the planet's atmosphere. If our vessel is in orbit and encounters those shock wave
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