Let's suppose for a moment Voyager had not been stranded in the Delta Quadrant, but in the Sagittarius Dwarf galaxy instead, very near its fringe, on the Milky Way side of it. The sagittarius dwarf galaxy is a satellite galaxy to our own. See https://alexautindotcom.files.wordpress.com/2013/05/galaxy.gif for a picture of its location relative to our galaxy.
As far as I can determine, they would still be about 70.000 LY from home (give or take 10.000), but instead of being able to 'leapfrog' through our galaxy, they would have to cross a huge void sooner or later.
I can see the following options:
1. Still head for home in the shortest course possible, a large part of that straight line being through intergalactic void (or at the very least, incredibly sparsely populated by stars).
2. Try to minimise the 'void part', and head to the galactic plane in a perpendicular line, and once in our galaxy, resume a normal course for home. Even then, they probably still have to cross at least 10k-15k of void as far as I can tell, and it will lengthen their journey significantly compared to 1.
3. Not try to cross the void at all, but just head deeper into the sagittarius dwarf galaxy (hence travel away from earth), in hopes of locating a friendly civilization somewhere in that galaxy with technology that can help them make the jump .
4. Just give up on the idea of trying to get home, and try to make a new home somewhere within that galaxy, while at the same time never entirely loosing sight of locating technology like mentioned in 3.
What would be the wisest choice? And -not necessarily the same- what would Janeway or the crew have decided ?
As far as I can determine, they would still be about 70.000 LY from home (give or take 10.000), but instead of being able to 'leapfrog' through our galaxy, they would have to cross a huge void sooner or later.
I can see the following options:
1. Still head for home in the shortest course possible, a large part of that straight line being through intergalactic void (or at the very least, incredibly sparsely populated by stars).
2. Try to minimise the 'void part', and head to the galactic plane in a perpendicular line, and once in our galaxy, resume a normal course for home. Even then, they probably still have to cross at least 10k-15k of void as far as I can tell, and it will lengthen their journey significantly compared to 1.
3. Not try to cross the void at all, but just head deeper into the sagittarius dwarf galaxy (hence travel away from earth), in hopes of locating a friendly civilization somewhere in that galaxy with technology that can help them make the jump .
4. Just give up on the idea of trying to get home, and try to make a new home somewhere within that galaxy, while at the same time never entirely loosing sight of locating technology like mentioned in 3.
What would be the wisest choice? And -not necessarily the same- what would Janeway or the crew have decided ?