Difference between revisions of "Dilithium"

From Imperial Wiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search
Line 6: Line 6:


Dilithium is supposed to be carefully shaped and positioned within a warp core to provide an efficient reaction, but unworked or broken crystals can be installed in an emergency to get the warp drive working.<ref>TOS "Elaan of Troyius", TNG "Peak Performance"</ref>
Dilithium is supposed to be carefully shaped and positioned within a warp core to provide an efficient reaction, but unworked or broken crystals can be installed in an emergency to get the warp drive working.<ref>TOS "Elaan of Troyius", TNG "Peak Performance"</ref>
==Dilithium Dangers==
While dilithium is evidently non-toxic, it can pose a risk under the right circumstances. The planet Drema IV had "the largest deposit of dilithium ore ever recorded", and it was "growing to form perfectly aligned lattices". This crystal growth converted heat from the planets mantle into mechanical energy in the tectonic plates, resulting in severe earthquakes.


==Notes==
==Notes==

Revision as of 19:36, 2 February 2015

Prepared dilithium crystals in the Enterprise warp core
Spock and Scotty install raw dilithium in an emergency

Dilithium is a crystalline substance used to regulate matter-antimatter reactions in Star Trek warp cores.[1] Dilithium is a natural material typically mined from planets. It is apparently impossible to replicate, but decaying crystals can be made to "restructure" themselves via exposure to photons captured from a nuclear fission reaction.[2]

Dilithium crystals degrade over time in an operating warp core, particularly if the warp core runs at high output for an extended period of time. The orientation of crystals in the warp core affects the efficiency of the matter-antimatter reaction and can allow the warp core to accept reactants at a greater rate.[3]

Dilithium is supposed to be carefully shaped and positioned within a warp core to provide an efficient reaction, but unworked or broken crystals can be installed in an emergency to get the warp drive working.[4]

Dilithium Dangers

While dilithium is evidently non-toxic, it can pose a risk under the right circumstances. The planet Drema IV had "the largest deposit of dilithium ore ever recorded", and it was "growing to form perfectly aligned lattices". This crystal growth converted heat from the planets mantle into mechanical energy in the tectonic plates, resulting in severe earthquakes.

Notes

  1. TNG "Booby Trap"
  2. Star Trek IV: The Voyage Home
  3. TNG "Booby Trap"
  4. TOS "Elaan of Troyius", TNG "Peak Performance"