James Tiberius Kirk (
boldygoing) wrote in
nexus_sages2017-08-08 07:45 pm
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Jim Kirk enters the Nexus in a mild daze, still a little stunned at the news he's just received from Command. He doesn't look like he's shaved for a few weeks, but his black Starfleet Academy instructor's uniform is clean and his hair is neatly combed, so it's not like he's been letting himself go or anything.
He gets a cup of coffee on autopilot, before finding a seat to really think over what the hell just happened, a look of hopeful disbelief on his face, like he's been told something that's too good to be true.
"Have you ever had a dream job you never expected to get?" he asks after several minutes, looking up. "For those that haven't, if you knew you wouldn't be home for a couple years, what would you not leave without?"
He gets a cup of coffee on autopilot, before finding a seat to really think over what the hell just happened, a look of hopeful disbelief on his face, like he's been told something that's too good to be true.
"Have you ever had a dream job you never expected to get?" he asks after several minutes, looking up. "For those that haven't, if you knew you wouldn't be home for a couple years, what would you not leave without?"
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Right, he did bring it up at some point. "Starships need a lot of energy to operate efficiently, and the more powerful types of reactions - in this case, nuclear fusion - give off radioactive energy as a byproduct. We have the technology to contain it," he manages to say without wincing too noticeably, "but it's dangerous stuff. It can't be heard, seen, smelled, or felt, and even just a short exposure can make most species very sick or kill them outright." Something he has an uncomfortable, quietly horrifying experience with now, far more intimately than he ever wanted to know. "Its lethality does gradually decay over time, though if left alone, that can take thousands of years for it to be safe. Containment breaches are really rare, and so is needing to eject the core entirely, so it's not worth the risk of doubling your chances for something going wrong."
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"There are protective whole-body suits that we use to work with it safely at lower levels, like when the core is shut down, but even then there are still time limits before it makes you sick." Assuming one has time for such a thing... Jim sometimes wonders if he would've survived entry into the warp core if he'd had the time to suit up first. Probably not. He probably would've just lingered on longer before death took him. He can't focus on the what-ifs, though; he's alive now, and there's nothing else he could've done at the time.
"Earth humans call this sort of thing a double-edged sword," he adds. "If you know how to handle it, you can use it really effectively and safely, but there's still a risk of harming yourself, no matter how small."
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"I see, then, why a replacement is not carried. What is to be done if this heart of power is lost, unlikely as it may be?"
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"There are a couple things you can do, depending. The Federation has starbases at fairly regular intervals in explored space, and without warp, a starship can still use sublight impulse engines to start heading towards the closest one. It's very slow, but it's better than nothing. Like if you had to row a sailing ship." Even though Shade-Seeker said he's not a sailor, Jim feels fairly confident the Saxhleel knows enough to get the gist of it, at the very least. "We can also contact other ships over huge distances, so if communications are still working, we can call the closest starship and ask for help. Might have to wait a bit for them to get to us and give us a tow someplace where we can get repaired, and towing at warp is tricky business. The Enterprise had to get towed back to Earth after her maiden voyage and it took about two weeks to get there."
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