alkaline wrote:btw Aale: use either zant/wint together or ana/kata together, it isn't a mix and match system :-)
alkaline wrote:
I think that if you were travelling along in realmspace and jumped into tetraspace, you'd have your original realmic momentum. Thus, you would have to be travelling pretty fast when you did your jump so that you would keep travelling within tetraspace in order to intersect with realmspace again. Maybe if you exited realmspace on the wrong part of the curve you would shoot into tetraspace never to intersect with realmspace again.
sup2069 wrote: I would remember seeing episodes of Star Trek where their warp engines would become damaged while in Warp, then they would simply drop out.
sup2069 wrote: If not the ship could collide with a planet's shadow possibly 5 light years out. If that was true then, that wouldn't be exactly leaving our dimension right? Jumping into another dimension should void you in colliding with any realmic object in space.
ronsdimension wrote:
Also, what if a ship had the ability to “navigate” hyperspace? It wasn’t just hit the hyperdrive and hope for the best, but you could actually drive the ship in hyperspace and come out into realmspace at any point (in space and time) that you wanted to.
Aale de Winkel wrote:
Also in a voyager episode a humanoid race could fold space, they stood at some platform and ended up at some other planet.
Folded-space transport. Technology by which an object of almost any size could be transported across incredible distance almost instantaneously. The Sikarians used this technique in their spatial trajector, which permitted instantaneous travel across distances as great as 40,000 light years. Episode "Prime Factors" VGR
trajector Advanced technology developed by the people of Sikaris, permitting instantaneous folded-space transport across distances as great as 40,000 light-years. Voyager's personnel attempted to obtain trajectory technology. Unfortunately, the Sikaria's system was totally incompatible with Federation technology because of the use of antineutrinos as a catalyst in the space-folding process
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