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- From: jsbell@acs.ucalgary.ca (Joshua Bell)
- Subject: Re: Transporters & replicators
- Sender: news@acs.ucalgary.ca (USENET News System)
- Message-ID: <93Jan03.212112.17708@acs.ucalgary.ca>
- Date: Sun, 03 Jan 93 21:21:12 GMT
- References: <1993Jan1.000048.6901@pro-smof.cts.com> <93Jan01.071956.20642@acs.ucalgary.ca> <mark.0z1r@legend.akron.oh.us>
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- In article <mark.0z1r@legend.akron.oh.us> mark@legend.akron.oh.us (Mark E Daniel) writes:
- >I guess my question is this, which is probably an FAQ.
- >How much of a person does the transporter save? What's
- >to stop a deeply greiving transporter chief who has
- >lost a loved one to go back and pull the transporter
- >pattern and bring the dead loved one back to life?
-
- While there is no absolute canonical answer, we can piece one
- together from various clues, that fits nearly everything seen
- on-screen.
-
- The computers do not store enough data to recreate a person from
- scratch. Otherwise, they would replace lost crew members, make a
- fleetful of Datas, etc. There are some gizmos known as pattern
- buffers, and a matter stream, as well as the confinement beam.
- While its commonly said on the show that they use matter-energy
- conversion, a little math with show you that they could power the
- ship with a large rock if they kept it in an energy state. We
- also have references to phased matter, which appears to be matter
- suspended in a beam-out process.
-
- I hypothesize that phased matter is the matter suspended in the
- annular confinement beam, which is used to take the transportee
- apart, and put them back together, as well as keep them
- topologically whole during the process. In other words, from
- their point of view, they remain whole and the world 'beams out'.
- This is why they remain concious during transport. Scotty was in
- an old-style transport beam and/or the diagnostic loop froze the
- beam so he was in stasis, so he wasn't concious 75 years.
-
- The pattern buffer is a whirling matrix of phased matter in the
- ACB, while the subject is beamed out and beamed in. In order to
- keep track of where every part of the subject is, the computer
- constructs a pattern to keep track of what bits of the stream end
- up where. An analogy would be the [left->right->left&down]->top
- pattern a television electron gun follows to paint a picture on
- the phosphors of the screen. The television (we're assuming an
- old analog no-frills model) doesn't know and can't possibly
- store the information needed to construct a one-hour program, but
- it has a pattern, and uses a modulated electron stream to do it.
-
- The pattern is probably highly complex. Pattern degredation
- occurs because the annular confinement beams aren't perfect. The
- matter stream comes out of alignment with the computer's pattern
- predictions for where things should be. Obviously, this is a bad
- thing. By keeping the matter stream and pattern static, locked in
- a diagnostic loop, there is no signal loss.
-
- A hint as to how these patterns are defined is the Biofilter. It
- looks for elements of the pattern which aren't found in normal
- beings/equipment, or those of known viruses and bacteria. It can
- simply erase those parts of the pattern, and those parts of the
- matter stream won't beam back in.
-
- Now, ST:TNG has 'broken' the rules of transporters a number of
- times. Lets look at the most glaring examples, and try and unify
- them with this theory:
-
- "Unnatural Selection" - Pulaski is restored from an aged state by
- the use of the biofilter. If Pulaski's altered DNA could be
- tagged as unwanted, the pattern could be tweaked to restore the
- DNA (its pretty much all the same molecules anyway, just shuffle
- some base-pairs around). As for her recovering instantly... well,
- its a TV show.
-
- "Lonely Among Us" - Picard is recovered from being beamed away as
- pure energy. They actually state most of the answer in the
- episode: the computer is able to reconstruct Picard by using the
- pattern it had stored, working with the phased matter stream that
- Picard's energy state itself formed.
-
- "Rascals" - Picard, Keiko, Guinan and Ro are turned into children
- in a freak transporter accident, and later restored. I won't even
- try. First off, the biology used in this episode is pure BS.
- Secondly, if a quick fix like this can alter the aging process,
- then by tuning it, no-one will ever grow old and die again.
-
- "Relics" - I hinted at this before. Scotty's pattern and the
- phased matter stream are locked in a diagnostic cycle, so from
- his point of view he's in stasis. An alternate theory is that it
- was an old-style transport beam. If you watch the original TV
- series, there are 2 stages (though they sometimes skip the first)
- in a beamout. First, a sparkly pattern appears over the chest of
- the subject, and spreads to cover them. They are sometimes seen
- to move during this process. Then they start to have these yellow
- blob things appear as they fade out. They don't move during this.
- We can speculate that there's a stasis field employed for some
- reason (technological limitations, safety, etc) during the actual
- transport stage with old technology. In TNG people remain active
- throughout the entire process, while in TFS, we've seen
- comversations occur while in tranport.
-
- "Realm of Fear" - This is a transporter-tech's dream episode. We
- get technobable from the tech manual, phased matter everywhere,
- and nifty bugs which live in plasma and exist as phased matter
- themselves. Somehow these bugs act like a natural ACB, allowing
- those trapped in the beam to maintain their patterns naturally.
- The computer is able to use the biofilter to rebuild the patterns
- and restore the individuals.
-
- All my own speculation, but I'm happy with it. :)
-
- Joshua
- | A shimmering net undulating like an infinite borealis. |
- | - Chapterhouse: Dune |
- | |
- | jsbell@acs.ucalgary.ca Academic Computing Services, University of Calgary |
-