Mad wrote:
"May be possible" is different from "is possible."
That is obviously.
STAR TREK: THE NEXT GENERATION
"Chain of Command"
27 CONTINUED: (3)
PICARD
Starfleet Intelligence believes
that the Cardassians are
developing a new delivery system --
one which would protect them from
any accidental exposure to the
toxin.
(beat)
They believe the Cardassians are
testing a way of launching dormant
metagenic material on a
subspace
carrier wave.
[...]
PICARD
When I was on the Stargazer, we
conducted extensive tests using
theta-band
carrier waves. One of
the reasons I was selected for
this mission is my familiarity
with the methods used to generate
them. [...]
I think you can consider Cpt. Picard as an expert on these field. If he thinks, that it is possible to launching dormant metagenic material on a subspace carrier wave, I have no reasons to believe that he is mistaken. Do you have any indication for a mistake on his part?
And if you can send metagenic material through subspace, which consists of large molecules, why should it not be able to send subatomic particles through subspace.
One sound reason is enough and I concede this point.
If not, then how can you claim that it would work for sensors when?
I don't claim it. I would never allow me to claim it, cause it's all theortical and there is no real subspace knowledge with which you could confirm such a claim.
I try to explain this incident. Do you have another explanation which is better than mine?
Excuse me again. That was a kind of typo. I have to translate all my thoughts to english and here it is meanwhile 00:14. It schould be obviosly, that I didn't mean positrons but gravitons.
So then you're saying you have "no clue about the demeanor of gravitons"? In that case,
why are you trying to debate regarding them? You are clearly in over your head here.
Häh...? What has your conclusion to do with my typo. Only because I have unintentional made a mistake doesn't mean, that I have "no clue about the demeanor of gravitons"
Again, the existence of gravitons, which are elementary particles, aren't proofed. Their properties aren't proofed. Almost everybody would be over his or her head here. Possibile exception: someone with a degree of doctor in theoretical quantum- and elementar physic. And even such person have to rely on speculations and theories. He couldn't present evidenve too.
I assume merely that a graviton would have properties like another elementary particle. Do you think, that this is wrong? If you think so, please explain your thoughts to me.
Do you remember saying "I think, that I, who has no direct knowledge about these technology, have to belief this person"? You have no knowledge about gravitons or gravity, and I and others here do. It would do you good to believe us instead of spouting nonsense.
see above:
In Star Trek you must consider Cpt. Picard as an expert on these field. Do you claim, you know someone, who has direct knowledge about subspace technology and know it better than Cpt. Picard? I would concede ouright if such a person would say, that I'm mistaken. Otherwise I have to deal with the knowledge I have of these subspace technology from Star Trek itself.
I merely try to accommodate my own knowledge of physics with the parameters which are given by Star Trek. And I say it again, if you have a better solution for some discrepancies, say it.
But don't argue STAR TREK is wrong. I know this (at least in not a few incidents). But you have no background for a discussion if you argue in this way at all. You have to accommodate your own knowledge of physics with the parameters which are given by Star Trek. And sometimes you have to accept, that it isn't possible.
But as far as I know, till now, I haven't had such a problem.
How are you going to know the mass of every ship and factor it out in the calculations?
Through constantly monitoring the changes in the gravitation when these ships are moving in relation to each other source of gravitation. Such a moving result imperatively in a small change in the gravitation.
Nevermind that they would only work as close-range sensors for anything realtime.
Please read page 4 from this thread:
AVOGARDO wrote:
There are two possibilities to detect gravitons in principle: activ and passiv.
An active signal interact with these gravitons and a kind of new signal is created by these interaction which is detectabel.
The first signal doesn't have to be a subspace signal. It could be send through subspace and than, the second signal could be transmitted in supspace too.
But then there is also the possibility to detect gravitons in a passiv way without sending a signal to the gravitons. In relativistic vicinity the graviton would come to the sensor module just as well as light to a camera.
If the first variant is possible, than the second variant is also possible insofar as the sensor signal, with which the graviton is detectabel, is not send through the whole space but is created only in the sensor module itself and detect only the gravitons which get to it.
But furthermore there is the possibility that gravitons are detactable without a signal with which they have to interact as well as light.
[...]
I think, it could happen similarly to the detection of light or the detection of neurinos in the Sudbury Neutrino Observatory.
[...]
Maybe these sensore systems can be connect to a subspace system when superluminal detection is needed.
[...]
The subspace technology would only be necessary for these and to send active sensor signals from otherwise not-subspace sensor modules through the supspace or to receive signals which are send through subspace.
Please note, that my thoughts are theoretical. That would be only possibilities. But if you have any exceptions, please tell me these.
But we know that it is possible to detect positrons superluminal and out of relativistic vicinity. It was done with the Crystalline Entity.
No, even those ideal circumstances wouldn't help. If you don't know what its velocity is (and what are the chances that it'd be constant?), then you don't know if it's a big object moving slowly or a small object moving quickly.
No, if you assume that velocity and mass are constant, than you could calculate with the increasing gravitation the velocity. That both are constant is likely to be usual. Why should someone change its velocity or mass during travel between two points, for example two planets? Every change in the velocity needs energy. It could happen, sure, there could always be a reason, but that would not be a normal case.
Even if the ship are evenly accelerating, this calculation should be possible.
But you can calculate the approaching-speed of an approaching object with the doppler effect for gravitation too.
I never said, that you could get a distance with this method alone. Hell. it's a sensor to detect gravitation an not for distance. But If you have the distance through other sensor systems, you can calculate the mass via its gravitation.
Or you could try to get a position through a triangulation, if you can detect at least the direction in which a source of gravitation is, which interfere with the known locally gravitation-muster.
And you
always need at least two variables to calculate a third.
You can't get a velocity without time and distance.
Without a movement, a change of position from point one to point two, you have no time.
Without time, you have no movement, a change of position from point one to point two.
And so on, and so on...
Why do you insist, that because it is not possible to determine the mass of an objekt without at least two other variables, that my explanation is impossible. That made no sense. That is the normal case.