• Steve@startrek.website
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    8 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.

    • TheOakTree@lemm.ee
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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.

      • nxdefiant@startrek.website
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        8 months ago

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

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

  • garyyo@lemmy.world
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    8 months ago

    Actually, space in general is mostly 2 dimensional, in that all the interesting stuff generally takes place on some sort of almost flat plane. A star system is generally on a plane, so is the galactic system, and for most planet+moons too. They just tend to be different planes so for ease of communication you will probably just align your idea of down with whatever the most convenient plane is. This of course is ignoring what gravity down is, as that changes as thrust does.

    And as for ship alignment, yeah no one is going to worry about that till its time to dock, at which point the lighter vessel will likely change their orientation since its easier and takes less energy. Spaceships are not going to be within human sight range of each other most of the time, even being in relatively the same are. Space too big and getting ships close to each other is dangerous!

    But in media that fucks with people’s idea of meeting and seeing each other so for convenience of not confusing the audience you don’t see that level of realism often.

  • Narrrz@kbin.social
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    8 months ago

    I think most species probably align themselves to either the galactic plane or prominent orbital plane of the local star system.

    the “up” & “down” directions would be completely arbitrary, though. there’s no reason to think everone would decide on a standard for those.

    and species without that certain sense of appropriateness, or an overt dedication to logic, would likely not bother with a standard orientation. and especially when in orbit over a planet, I think everyone would orient their “down” towards the surface.