Go to the Prom?
"This time, it's gonna go great. This time..."Go to the Prom?
"This time, it's gonna go great. This time..."
*prom date shows up with a large mechanical device called the Fist-o-Matic*
In space no one can see you're shooting with a 33 element lens... Until they view the footage...Dear JJ Abrams, enough with the lens flare already.
But how does he shoot CGI with a 33 element lens...?In space no one can see you're shooting with a 33 element lens... Until they view the footage...
He's JJ Abrams, we're just looking though his eyes. It's how he really sees life.But how does he shoot CGI with a 33 element lens...?
I hear flares are a side effect of lasik.Then he needs to see an optometrist.
Nah, starbursts maybe, but no lens flares.I hear flares are a side effect of lasik.
It's directly proportional to the number of times Scotty asks the ship to hold herself together.It's risky to engage warp drive in the upper atmosphere, and suicidal closer to the planets surface:
http://memory-beta.wikia.com/wiki/Warp_drive
Pretty sure you wouldn't want to engage it while under water. Fortunately thrusters aren't based on warp technology.
There are two basic needs for waterproofing. Water is a solvent, so anything used must be non corroding in water. The second is water ingress through holes and crack.
Presumably it is both watertight (since its space tight) and it isn't easily corroded because it was built largely on earth, and can readily stay inside the atmosphere, which is heavily laden with water vapor.
Therefore I expect it is waterproof enough to dive to some depth. The crush strength of the hull comes into play at that point. But being able to dive to the few hundred feet necessary to submerge the whole thing shouldn't be that difficult.
But I imagine it'll come up in the movie. When has a Star Trek movie been made where someone didn't question the ships ability to perform some maneuver or feat? The enterprise is as much a character as Kirk is.
In one of the old technical manuals my dad had when I was younger I remember reading something about how the ships aren't meant to operate in atmospheres at all. They obviously abandoned that kind of stuff since then.
They've got a matter/antimatter energy source for virtually unlimited power, and plasma thrusters.I have no idea how the engines on the enterprise are supposed to work, but it doesn't look like it should be able to generate any kind of lift.
"On my mark, fire all photon torpedoes straight down."I have no idea how the engines on the enterprise are supposed to work, but it doesn't look like it should be able to generate any kind of lift.
They've got shields that can keep their internal air pressure inside during a hull breach, I'm sure they can extend a shield around the ship to protect it from air turbulence.Well, they have warp drive and sub-light impulse (which uses a huge magnetic coil in conjunction with the warp drives mass altering to propel the ship at tremendous speeds) and it has maneuvering thrusters (which are basically just as we have now, only Star Trek super advanced). The whole messing with the fabric of space thing the warp drive and the impulse engines do would probably be a shitty idea to do in an atmosphere. They could use the thrusters inside an atmosphere but the ship design itself would lead me to believe that that's the last thing you would want to do. Imagine the stresses on the neck pylon thing on most Federation ships in gravity.
They apparently build ships that can land on planets (like the Intrepid class), and shuttles do it somehow without using thrusters for getting around in atmospheres, so there is clearly something keeping it going. My best guesses?They could use the thrusters inside an atmosphere but the ship design itself would lead me to believe that that's the last thing you would want to do. Imagine the stresses on the neck pylon thing on most Federation ships in gravity.
Only good guy ships have them though. The bad guy ships will literally explode into nothingness with a single well-placed, but difficult to launch torpedo. Apparently, the warhead is charged with desperation.There are structural integrity fields to keep the ship from shaking itself apart when maneuvering/taking damage, and other shit too.
No, there isn't, thanks to Inertial Dampers. Basically, these things make warp travel possible as depicted in the show, as they keep everyone from dying the instant they jump to warp, as they'd slam in the walls the moment it activated and turn them into chunky salsa. It also serves as a convenient excuse for why the heroes don't run when they really don't have any reason to fight.On the physics side, it always bugged me when people say, "there's no gravity! You can make the ship any shape you want!" Yeah, well there's still inertia in space.
Inertial dampeners just keep the contents of the ship from experiencing inertia with respect to the perspective of outside the ship - the structural integrity field is what allows spaceships to be oddly shaped such as enterprise without the stresses of the engines shearing off their pylons or the torsion from maneuvering causing the hull to rupture.No, there isn't, thanks to Inertial Dampers. Basically, these things make warp travel possible as depicted in the show, as they keep everyone from dying the instant they jump to warp, as they'd slam in the walls the moment it activated and turn them into chunky salsa. It also serves as a convenient excuse for why the heroes don't run when they really don't have any reason to fight.
I'm sure they break like 16 rules of physics.
Eh, Voyager can cruise around in a liquid universe full of Borg killing CG abominations, I'm sure the thing can handle being under water.There are structural integrity fields to keep the ship from shaking itself apart when maneuvering/taking damage, and other shit too. Yes, they're stretching disbelief to the breaking point in the name of "rule of cool," but really...
Bounce a graviton particle beam
Off the main deflector dish
That's the way we do things, lad
We're makin' shit up as we wish
The Klingons and the Romulans
Pose no threat to us
'Cause if we find we're in a bind
We just make some shit up.
Honestly, I don't think it's consistent with canon for the Enterprise to be submersible, but let's be honest, it's not the most egregiously retarded thing star trek writers have pulled out of their ass.