J.J. Abrams' Star Trek


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As a lifelong Trekkie all I have to say about that new trailer is this:

I need new pants.

Plus, the music was epic win. Sounded like the dark knight almost.

And when Kirk sat in the captain's chair I got freaking goosebumps.

Yeah this film looks the boss!

The parts where they show the building of the Enterprise on the ground bothers me. It should be in space.

I'm not used to seeing it being built on the ground either. I suppose that means the new Enterprise is a bit sturdier than before.

The fact that it was too expensive to have the original Enterprise landing on a planet each week gave us the wonderful transporter, and little slab sided shuttlecraft. :p .

I just saw the new trailer. If I am not mistaken, that was Spock telling Nero "James Kirk was a great man." Oh my. I got goose bumps. This movie is going to rock. Seems Spock will have a face to face confrontation with Nero. Wow.

The parts where they show the building of the Enterprise on the ground bothers me. It should be in space.

Why, Utopia Planitia had a Surface Facility quite a few ships were built on the surface including the Enterprise-D, Defiant and Voyager.

post-253434-1236433691.jpg

I just saw the new trailer. If I am not mistaken, that was Spock telling Nero "James Kirk was a great man." Oh my. I got goose bumps. This movie is going to rock. Seems Spock will have a face to face confrontation with Nero. Wow.

It was Nero who said that.

It was Nero who said that.

Look at the trailer again and listen closely to the voice speaking. It was Spock telling Nero that Kirk was a great man then Nero tells Spock: "That was in another life."

This movie is going to be very interesting. Maybe Spock dies on this one. Who knows. I can't wait till May.

Look at the trailer again and listen closely to the voice speaking. It was Spock telling Nero that Kirk was a great man then Nero tells Spock: "That was in another life."

This movie is going to be very interesting. Maybe Spock dies on this one. Who knows. I can't wait till May.

I have and did. The voice sounds like Nero and that's what I'm banking on until you can prove otherwise ;)

Why should it? The main bulk could be built on Earth then towed to space. Remember, this needn't be true to the original stories...

Because it would collapse under its own weight.

Why, Utopia Planitia had a Surface Facility quite a few ships were built on the surface including the Enterprise-D, Defiant and Voyager.

post-253434-1236433691.jpg

Where has it ever been said that ships were built on the surface? Mars also has a much lighter gravity, but not enough for it to matter, I guess. The Yards had facilities in both space and on the surface.

Because it would collapse under its own weight.

Structural Integrity Fields?

Where has it ever been said that ships were built on the surface? Mars also has a much lighter gravity, but not enough for it to matter, I guess. The Yards had facilities in both space and on the surface.

Twice in TNG and once in Voyager.

In an alternate timeline visited by Worf in 2370, the Cardassians were using the Argus Array to spy on several of Starfleet's most important ship yards and design complexes, including the Utopia Planitia surface facilities, along with Starbase 47, Deep Space 5 and the Iadara colony. (TNG: "Parallels")

Thats what that picture is from i pasted.

Structural Integrity Fields?

Twice in TNG and once in Voyager.

Thats what that picture is from i pasted.

I didn't say there were no surface facilities, I asked when they SPECIFIED that the entire ships were built on the surface. There are orbital facilites also. Every book has always made it very clear that ships are built in space, and the SIF would be useless until the ship was completed anyway.

edit: according to my TNG Technical manual, the assembly started at the Utopia Planitia assembly site, 16,625 kilometres above the surface of Mars with the joining of the Deck 10 computer core elliptical compression bulkhead, and the starboard main longitudinal compression bulkhead.

edit2: http://memory-alpha.org/en/wiki/USS_Enterp...29#Construction

Edited by Joel
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The study further showed that standard frameworks used in open quantum systems, including quantum Brownian motion and master equations like the Lindblad and Pauli forms, could be written in a time-symmetric way. These equations are typically used to describe processes that look irreversible, such as dissipation and thermalisation, but the results suggested they can also be interpreted as allowing evolution in both time directions. Thomas Guff, Research Fellow in Quantum Thermodynamics, said: "The surprising part of this project was that even after making the standard simplifying assumption to our equations describing open quantum systems, the equations still behaved the same way whether the system was moving forwards or backwards in time. When we carefully worked through the maths, we found that this behaviour had to be the case because a key part of the equation, the "memory kernel," is symmetrical in time. 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