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BnB wrote:Posted: Wed Sep 13, 2006 6:17 am Post subject: Question regarding Vulcan night vision
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I am finally trying my hand at my first fan fiction (please don't hold your breath, no telling when I will get it done) and I want to check something.
Is there any canon information about Vulcan night vision or lack thereof? I am only talking about canon night vision.
I have read books and fan fiction that tell it both ways. If I follow some of my favorite commercial books and allow for Vulcan to have her sister planet T'Kuht, then I would guess Vulcan's would have lousy night vision.
My reasoning is thus. T'Kuht is reported to be monstrously large and bright. Vulcan's atmosphere is thin, allowing bright star shine to get through, like the high mountains or high desert here on earth. Therefore nights on Vulcan would be almost uniformly brightly lit and Vulcan's would never have needed to develop good night vision.
OTOH, earth has a moon with one of the lowest albedos (reflectivity) in the solar system. Our atmosphere is thick, and packed full of clouds. Plus our moon goes through regular phases where is it partly or totally obscured by earth's shadow. By my reasoning earth nights would be significantly darker than Vulcan nights as a rule, so human's should have better night vision.
But that is just my reasoning and I am willing to change it if there is any canonical evidence to contradict it. But If it is just a matter of arguing with other fans I will gird myself for argument
Does anyone know of any canon information on ayn series from TOS, TNG, DS9, VOY or ENT that would contradict my assumptions?
Thanks in advance.
BnB
Kevin Thomas Riley wrote:^ Well, that's all the (IMHO) contrived explanations I've read for years about it. But evolution rarely take such detours. I read a book about plausible alien worlds once (it was years ago and I've forgotten the title) and I remember it saying that high garavity worlds would have slow, squat people who might even have developed some sort of natural "body armour". And low gravity worlds would have tall, slim and graceful people.
But hey, this is Trek and there isn't much that makes sense from a scientific viewpoint (inter-species breeding, FTL drive, artificial gravity, teleportation, replicators...)
Elessar wrote:teleportation's oddly probably the one we're closest to!
Kevin Thomas Riley wrote:Elessar wrote:teleportation's oddly probably the one we're closest to!
Feh! I don't believe that for a second. Remember the Heisenberg uncertainty principle.
And don't give me that "Heisenberg compensator" crap they made up on TNG!
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