Memory Alpha
Memory Alpha
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When asked by ''Time Magazine'' in {{y|1994}}, "How do the Heisenberg compensators work?" [[Michael Okuda|Mike Okuda]] famously replied, "They work just fine, thank you."
 
When asked by ''Time Magazine'' in {{y|1994}}, "How do the Heisenberg compensators work?" [[Michael Okuda|Mike Okuda]] famously replied, "They work just fine, thank you."
   
The Heisenberg compensator started originally as a joke put on the transporter console in TNG.
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The Heisenberg compensator started originally as a joke put on the transporter console in TNG. {{incite}}
   
[[Category:Transporter technology]]
 
   
 
[[cs:Heisenbergův kompenzátor]]
 
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[[Category:Transporter technology]]

Revision as of 05:10, 11 December 2009

File:Barclay and obrien checking the heisenberg compensator.jpg

Lt. Barclay and Chief O'Brien scanning the Heisenberg compensators

The Heisenberg compensator (or subspace field compensator) is a component of the transporter system. The compensator works around the problems caused by the Heisenberg Uncertainty Principle (hence the name), allowing the transporter sensors to compensate for their inability to determine both the position and momentum of the target particles to the same degree of accuracy. This ensures the matter stream remains coherent during transport, and no data is lost.

A scan of the Heisenberg compensators, to make sure they perform within the specified parameters, can be performed by raising the transporter pad. (TNG: "Realm of Fear")

While trying to devise a way to transport holographic matter off the holodeck without it disintegrating instantly, the idea was put forth that decoupling the Heisenberg compensators might let the matter reform normally, although the suggestion was used as a stalling tactic against Professor James Moriarty, and the idea had never actually been tried before. (TNG: "Ship in a Bottle")

In 2371, Chief Miles O'Brien ordered a crewman to check the Heisenberg compensators of the USS Defiant. (DS9: "Past Tense, Part I")

Additional References

Background

The Heisenberg compensator was invented to circumvent the Heisenberg uncertainty principle, which states that one cannot know both the position of a subatomic particle and its momentum to arbitrary precision. (Star Trek Encyclopedia)

When asked by Time Magazine in 1994, "How do the Heisenberg compensators work?" Mike Okuda famously replied, "They work just fine, thank you."

The Heisenberg compensator started originally as a joke put on the transporter console in TNG. (citation needededit)