Anyone?
I mean, if it's just some sort of molecular disintegrator, how is it different from the transporter? The transporter could be used as a disintegration "beam" (and has been, see NOMAD; plus I don't see why a pad is needed). As I got older and watched Mirror, Mirror over and over, it bugged me that there was no explanation of this thing. Maybe it creates some sort of instant wormhole?
Also, it's a pretty nifty surveillance device. But can it function across ships as surveillance device or annihilation weapon or both? Can it "destroy" more that the matter in one person? Kirk said it would make mirror Spock "invincible." Would it? If its effects are confined to the interior of one ship, that is one huge overstatement.
Also, why would an alien scientist choose a name from earth's Greek mythology? I guess maybe he or she was a fan--all I can come up with.
I mean, if it's just some sort of molecular disintegrator, how is it different from the transporter? The transporter could be used as a disintegration "beam" (and has been, see NOMAD; plus I don't see why a pad is needed). As I got older and watched Mirror, Mirror over and over, it bugged me that there was no explanation of this thing. Maybe it creates some sort of instant wormhole?
Also, it's a pretty nifty surveillance device. But can it function across ships as surveillance device or annihilation weapon or both? Can it "destroy" more that the matter in one person? Kirk said it would make mirror Spock "invincible." Would it? If its effects are confined to the interior of one ship, that is one huge overstatement.
Also, why would an alien scientist choose a name from earth's Greek mythology? I guess maybe he or she was a fan--all I can come up with.