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Star Trek - The Next Gene…ractive Technical Manual
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Star Trek The Next Generation Interactive Technical Manual.iso
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HARDWARE ARRANGEMENT AND OPERATION
Most features of personal phaser internal configuration are common
to Type I and Type II. Energy is stored within a replenishable sarium krellide
cell. Sarium krellide holds a maximum of 1.3 x 10ñ megajoules per cubic
centimeter, at a maximum leak rate of no more than 1.05 kilojoules per hour.
When one considers that the total stored energy of even the Type I phaser, if
released all at once, is enough to vaporize three cubic meters of tritanium, it
is reassuring to know that a full storage cell cannot be discharged
accidentally. Sarium krellide must be coupled with the LiCu 521 crystal for
discharge to occur. Cell charging can be accomplished aboard ship through
standard power taps of the electro plasma system, and in the field through
portable bulk sarium krellide units. The Type I cell measures 2.4 x 3.0 cm and
holds 7.2 x 10ñ MJ; the Type II cell measures 10.2 x 3.0 cm and holds 4.5 x 10ª
MJ.
Downstream from the power cell are three interconnected control
modules: the beam control assembly, safety interlock, and subspace
transceiver assembly (STA). The beam control assembly includes tactile
interface buttons for configuring the phaser beam width and intensity, and a
firing trigger. The safety interlock is a code processor for safing the power
functions of the phaser and for personalizing a phaser for limited personnel
use. Key-press combinations of beam width and intensity controls are used
to configure the phaser╒s safety condition. The STA is used as part of the
safety system while aboard Starfleet vessels. It maintains contact between
the phaser and the ship computers to assure that power levels are
automatically restrained during shipboard firings, usually limited to heavy
stun. Emergency override commands may be keyed in by the beam controls.
The STA adapted for phaser use is augmented with target sensors and
processors for distant aiming functions.
Energy from the power cell is controlled by all three modules and
routed by shielded conduits to a prefire chamber, a 1.5 cm diameter sphere
of LiCu 521 reinforced with gulium arkenide. Here the energy is held
temporarily by a collapsible charge barrier before passing to the actual LiCu
521 emitter for discharge out of the phaser, creating a pulse. As with the
larger phaser types, the power level set by the user determines the pulse
frequency and relative proportion of protonic charge created in the final
emitter stage. The Type I contains a single prefire chamber; the Type II
contains four.
At triggering, the charge barrier field breaks down in 0.02
picoseconds. Through the rapid nadion effect the LiCu 521 segmented
emitter converts the pumped energy into a tuned phaser discharge. As with
the ship╒s main phasers, the greater the energy pumped from the prefire
chamber, the higher will be the percentage of nuclear disruption force (NDF)
created. At low to moderate settings, the nuclear disruption threshold will
not be crossed, limiting the phaser discharge to stun and thermal impact
resulting from simple electromagnetic (SEM) effects.
At the higher settings, as an override precaution for the user, the
discharge will take a distance of approximately one meter to decay and
recombine to form full-lethality emissions. In the Type I, the emitter crystal is
an elliptical solid measuring 0.5 x 1.2 cm. In the Type II, it is a regular
trapezoid 1.5 x 2.85 cm. ╞