• @[email protected]
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    388 months ago

    For a ship that never needs aerodynamic control, any shape at all will do so why do they all look like airplanes?

    The Borg are the only ones who seem to get this.

    • @[email protected]
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      188 months ago

      Realistically their does need to be some consideration but the medium they travel isn’t air, but the occasional speck of dust, hydrogen atom, and other small stuff. It’s not much but for interstellar travel there are still considerations needed, namely reducing your cross sectional area in the direction of travel. Long and thin gives you less drag since it hits less stuff.

      Regardless the airplane looks doesn’t make much sense anyway :)

    • @[email protected]
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      14
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      8 months ago

      Not a trekkie, do they ever land in atmosphere on these ships? You would want aerodynamics for that to reduce drag and thus heat, but I’m not familiar enough to know.

      I guess they probably have good thermal protections with their future tech, though.

      • @[email protected]
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        288 months ago

        Voyager does a few times. The Enterprise D did…once.

        There are some alternate timeline shenanigans I will not speak of here.

    • @[email protected]
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      138 months ago

      They don’t even need to fly nose-forward. The Enterprise could exit warp at any damn orientation it wanted. Blasting across the alpha quadrant nacelles-first, like Powdered Toast Man.

      • Chetzemoka
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        238 months ago

        They actually do need to fly nose first, believe it or not! The warp bubble created by the nacelle has a front side and a back side. Essentially it bunches up space behind the ship and thins it out in front of the ship, turning space itself into a sort of wave that the ship surfs forward on.

        This is what I remember from the TNG Tech Manual anyway