Legatus Legionis
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With recent, you mean the last... 12?In fairness, the recent Star Trek films have had as much "science" as Mad Max, too.
With recent, you mean the last... 12?
No..not really.Star Trek: The Motion Picture
The whole story about what happens if one of Earth's space probes (Voyager 6) gets intercepted by an alien race and is sent back to Earth (on steroids!)
How the transporters are not always 100%, and same with the warp engines.
Star Trek is full of science. From deflector shields to artificial gravity to universal translators to medical scans/beds to discovering new life and new civilizations ....
Of all the science fiction out their, Star Trek is one that takes science seriously.
But even so, like so many, when it comes to science fiction and fantasy, it is us being able to suspend reality and enjoy the film, video game, novel, TV show for the entertainment it provides.
No..not really.
The Enterprise is a massive ship. If it were to enter into a geosynchronous orbit around an inhabited planet ( which is a standard Trek procedure) the planet would be torn apart. Tsunamis would drown everyone.
Trek is notorious for ignoring the laws of physics. It was never about the science- Trek is a morality play. Its about the journey and what the journey tells us about ourselves. It fails in almost every way as science fiction- you could call it sci-fi, though.
It successfully presented an interesting worldview and a philosophy of acceptance and better living through science, but the science wasn't exactly a science.
No..not really.
The Enterprise is a massive ship. If it were to enter into a geosynchronous orbit around an inhabited planet ( which is a standard Trek procedure) the planet would be torn apart. Tsunamis would drown everyone.
Trek is a morality play.
The Enterprise D, which was larger than all the previous ones, is 642.5 meters long and weighs 4.5 million metric tons (according to Wikipedia, and that's likely drawn from the info in the Star Trek tech manual that was released). By contrast, the moon is 3.675 x10^19 metric tons; 8.167 x10^12 times more massive than the Enterprise D.
It's alwo worth noting that geosynchronous orbit is not necessarily standard procedure. Several instances exist of a ship entering into "standard orbit" around a planet. Standard orbit is never particularly defined as to distance from the planet (though it clearly is within transporter range) or the planetary latitude it corresponds to. Plus, geosynchronous orbit simply means that the ship remains directly above a specific point on the planet. It makes no mention of the distance from the planet.
Star Trek is full of pseudo-science stuff like that IMO. Proto-Matter, that can somehow be used to turn a dead planet into a viable ecosphere (at least for a time, because "proto-matter is unstable").Now if anyone wants to discuss the business of "red matter", that's a different thing all together. It's also not from what I would call "Star Trek" anymore![]()
No..not really.
The Enterprise is a massive ship. If it were to enter into a geosynchronous orbit around an inhabited planet ( which is a standard Trek procedure) the planet would be torn apart. Tsunamis would drown everyone.