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Impulse drive

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In the fictional Star Trek universe, the impulse drive is the method of propulsion that starships and other spacecraft use when they are traveling below the speed of light. Typically powered by nuclear fusion reactions, impulse engines let ships travel interplanetary distances readily. For example, Starfleet Academy cadets use impulse engines when flying from Earth to Saturn and back.

There are three practical challenges surrounding impulse drive design: acceleration, time dilation and energy conservation. In the show, inertial dampers compensate for acceleration. Time dilation would become noticeable at appreciable fractions of the speed of light. Regarding energy conservation, the television series and books offer two explanations:

  • A less-common yet more plausible explanation calls for a gravitational distortion, a wave, through space, which the ship essentially rides. As such, "one half impulse" and "full impulse" measure speed and not acceleration. In the book Final Frontier by Diane Carey, this explanation on how the "internally metered pulse drive" (shortened to "I.M. pulse drive", shortened further to "impulse drive") enables the rapid accelerations and maneuvers possible by the starship.
  • Star Trek: The Next Generation Technical Manual indicates that the impulse engines are nuclear fusion engines whereas the plasma from the fusion reactor powers a massive magnetic coil to propel the ship. It is a form of magnetoplasmadynamic thruster. This is used in conjunction with the ship's warp drive's alteration of the ships relativistic mass, to achieve mid-to-high sub-light speeds. Thrusters, on the other hand, are closer to the designs of a high-efficiency reactant propellant (i.e. a sophisticated rocket engine) and are usually used for high-precision maneuvers. Ion propulsion drives are explicitly detailed to be used in Star Trek by Dominion and Iconian Starships and facilities.
  • Since a ship traveling at impulse velocities (slower than, but approaching, the speed of light) is still traveling in the normal space-time continuum, concerns of time dilation apply, so high relativistic speeds are avoided unless absolutely necessary; impulse power is therefore customarily limited to a maximum of ¼ lightspeed. (Warp travel, on the other hand, does not involve time dilation effects.)

Some Star Trek fans claim that impulse drives are actually ion propulsion drives. Impulse engines may also be a type of nuclear pulse system such as suggested for the real-life projects

Ion propulsion engines use electricity to ionise fuel like mercury or xenon and propel it with a high electric field to generate a low but continuous thrust.

Impulse Drives are also found in the online space simulation MMORPG, Ogame

See also

In the Star trek episode "The Cage" Then captain Pike clearly calls the impulse drive the rocket drive. Impulse engines are rocket engines. However there appears to be a low power micro-warp version of warp drive that is used along with rocket engines during impulse powered flight in star trek.Tmayes1999 09:48, 31 August 2007 (UTC)