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Voyager - Threshold Review (2/3)

Opinionated Voyager Episode Guide's look at Threshold continues, with the casual defiling of two different fields of science. My rather more clinical examinations of the first part dredge into grea...  
 
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thecommentmaster1 (2 weeks ago) Show Hide
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We are not pokemon lol
Altairograph (1 month ago) Show Hide
+4
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Individuals don't evolve! We are not pokemon!

ROFL!
riveness (1 month ago) Show Hide
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At infinite speed occupying all points in universe, surely they should detect him being everywhere.
maltheopia (2 months ago) Show Hide
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PEOPLE

ARE NOT

POKEMON
mack24seven (2 months ago) Show Hide
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No, warp speed doubles the speed of light with each factor. (Time warp factor was shorted to warp factor, then to just "warp.") Warp 1 = speed lf light, warp 2 = twice the speed of light, warp 3 = 4x the speed of light, warp 4 = 8x the speed of light, etc. Theoretically, warp 10 = 512x the speed of light.
Crymson1 (2 months ago) Show Hide
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Not true. Warp numbers are exponential.
ThomasMcCormack (3 months ago) Show Hide
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Actually, according to the scale created by Michael Okuda for TNG, 10 times the speed of light is somewhere around warp 2. There's an image of that scale on wikipedia's Warp Drive page, if you're interested.
Ajraddatz (3 months ago) Show Hide
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OOh, I get it. Warp goes in powers of 10.... Kind of like the PH scale.
ThomasMcCormack (3 months ago) Show Hide
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Not quite... for warp 1-9, the speed is w ^ 10/3 times c, where w is the warp factor and c is the speed of light. There isn't an exact formula for past warp 9, as it's based on a hand-drawn curve that approaches infinity.
Ajraddatz (3 months ago) Show Hide
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That makes sense, but the ship should be able to go any speed that it wants by modifying the speed by .000000000001 and beyond.

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