Not that such things matter.

        • Stamets@startrek.website
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          1 year ago

          Well that does depend on the ship or station in question. Primarily they were used for the impulse engines which were essentially a bunch of fusion reactors strapped together and a nozzle to direct thrust. The power could be fed throughout the ship by directing it through EPS conduits. DS9 had fusion reactors left over from the Cardassians, if I remember correctly, that were used to power the overall station. If my memory is correct then those same fusion reactors could also be used in a self-destruct sequence on board DS9.

            • Stamets@startrek.website
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              1 year ago

              Ask whatever you like, I apparently have no depths to which I will not sink to embarrass myself lol

              That being said I’m not sure how they work precisely. I don’t know if they’ve ever talked about that much on screen and I am pretty sure it’s not in the TNG Tech Manual. Not sure about others. I know that Reed described it as a ‘stable EM barrier’ and that they are generated from transmitters throughout various junctions and corridors. However forcefields are also just miniature versions of the shields we see around ships. Those are generated using a high concentration of gravitons to generate layers of disruptive energy that cocoon the ship in it’s protective shield. Presumably the same sort of technology is being used but on a significantly smaller scale and with less overall power.