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Nova-Class
Frigate

UNITED
FEDERATION OF PLANETS: STARFLEET DIVISION
Advanced
Technical Specifications for the Nova-Class Production Vehicle

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Accommodation:
80 (15 Officers,
65 Enlisted Crew)
Classification:
Frigate [Surveyor]
Funding for Nova Class Development Project Provided by:
Advanced
Starship Design Bureau, United Federation of Planets Defense Council
Development Project Started:
2363
Production Start Date:
2367
Production End Date:
Still in Production
Current Status:
In Service |
Locations of Nova-Class Construction:
-
Avondale Production Facility, Rigel II
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San Francisco
Fleet Yards,
Earth
Current Starship Identification and Registration Numbers:
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CONTENTS
1.0 NOVA-CLASS
INTRODUCTION

1.1 MISSION OBJECTIVES
Pursuant to Starfleet
Exploration Directives 1016.8 & 901.12, Federation Diplomatic Corps Mandate
66.105.b, 66.105.c & 200.2.2, and Federation Security Council General Policy,
the following objectives have been established for a Nova Class Starship:
- Provide a platform for
extended scientific survey and scouting missions.
- Replace the Oberth for
system and planetary survey missions.
- Provide autonomous
capability for full execution of Federation defensive, cultural, scientific,
and explorative policy in deep space or border territory.
- Serve as a frontline
support vehicle during emergencies and a platform for the extension of
Federation diplomacy and policy.
- Provide non-critical
functions such as transport of personnel and cargo when necessary, extended
aid, and short-range patrol.
1.2 DESIGN STATISTICS

Length: 180 meters
Width: 43 meters
Height: 34 meters
Weight:
276,948 metric tons
Cargo capacity:
11,750 metric tons
Hull:
Duranium-Tritanium
composite
Number of Decks:
8
Total
1.3 GENERAL OVERVIEW

Editor's Note: History written by Kurt Goring - based on information found in
Star Trek: First Contact, Star Trek: Voyager, Star Trek Technical Manual, Star
Trek: The Next Generation Technical Manual, Star Trek: Deep Space 9 Technical
Manual, and Star Trek: The Magazine. The style of the history is based on
histories presented in the Star Trek Spaceflight Chronology by Stan
Goldstein, Fred Goldstein, and Rick Sternbach. Please keep in mind that this is
a history developed based on canon information presented in various sources and
filled in with logical conjecture.
Sometimes described as the
little sister in the new family of Starfleet vessels, the Nova Class
Survey Frigate is part of the new breed of starships in service.
Aggressively designed, the
small ship and its lack of amenities manage to surpass one’s first impression of
its diminutive size. Known for its durability, the Nova Class has swiftly
loss its status as a ‘little ship’ and is slowly gaining acclaim for their
usefulness in making for more accurate missions to new areas of space, bringing
back teraquads of data on individual systems that is disseminated amongst the
fleets.
The Nova sports impressive
weaponry for its size, and its scientific capabilities more than make up for its
reduction in speed when compared to its larger ‘cousins’. Double deflector
dishes also provide added security when far from a starbase or suitable repair
facility, in that a single malfunctioning or damaged deflector will not prevent
the ship from going to warp.
Highly accurate sensors
and computer systems makes it the perfect tool to send into scarcely known
territory and many discoveries have been made by Nova Classes finding
things larger Explorer-type ships such as the Galaxy Class left behind.
Amenities are few and far
between on a Nova, but its work is important and crews that work on these small
ships know their worth and protect their reputations fiercely. Much like the
favored Oberth, the Nova is sure to hold a place in Starfleet lore for a long
time to come.
1.4 CONSTRUCTION HISTORY

The Starfleet Corps of
Engineers with the help of the Advanced Starship Design Bureau can do some
amazing things when it comes to the construction of Starships. Many of their
designs have outlived their expectations by years, and sometimes, decades.
In that time, the Oberth
has proven itself but the SCE and ASDB were sanctioned to replace it after over
a century of service in Starfleet.
There would be a new vessel built to gradually
phase out the Oberth Classes as the primary ship of the line in Survey and
Extended Study missions. This ship would have to be larger, and not display the
same limitations in speed and longevity that the Oberth was famous, if not
infamous, for. And like all of the new breed of ships, it would be equipped to
defend itself, unlike the Oberth.
The engineers at the ASDB
facility sat down to design this new Surveyor and rejected design after design
that paid homage to the Oberth. Nostalgia was overwhelming, when faced with the
concept of replacing a ship that had served for well over a century. More and
more designs were proposed and rejected, until finally someone stumbled on a
graveyard of other, rejected designs.
The Defiant-Pathfinder had
been originally designed as a weapon with nacelles, but had been rejected in
favor of a more groundbreaking approach to tactical design. Unbuilt, the ASDB
team resurrected the files and preliminary stress sketches and set to work
modifying the Defiant-Pathfinder and shrinking it toward a more usable size. Six
torpedo launchers were removed from the design, and replaced with a more
appropriate sensor package. It lost over fifty meters in length and its
proportions were reduced by the same percentage.
Slowly, the ship was coming
to shape and final approval was given to begin assembly on a test frame. This
new hull was small and smooth, easily designed and came together quickly. Soon
she was dubbed NX-72359 and began her internal construction.
One of the engineers
salvaged more than just the designs, taking a name intended for another class of
ships but never used. Name in hand, the new Nova Class Survey Frigate
came into slow creation. Its initial tests came off without a hitch, but it was
discovered that the ship could only carry a small warp core, and in conjunction
with its small nacelles would only be able to achieve a maximum speed of around
Warp 8. The administration approved the ship anyway and field tests began.
It proved to be a reliable
ship, with very few design errors. The limitations in speed were hardly noticed
when it carried out test survey missions inside Sol System, but the engineering
crew were mindful of its lack of facilities for long missions. At best, the ship
could operate totally independently for 12 months without visiting a starbase
for a major resupply. At worse, excessive use would force it to return much
sooner.
Sleek in design, its hull
shape was all but completely retained from its original Defiant-Pathfinder
incarnation. The tactically sound sunken bridge was left in, losing the ability
to be changed out with ease, but gaining added protection that was useful when
the ship was faced by just about anything that outgunned it.
Such a thing was difficult,
however, as the Nova Class came very well armed due to design
considerations that were evident in its original form. No fewer than nine phaser
arrays dotted the ship’s hull, and its long, low profile added to security. Its
shields were neither the strongest nor its engines the most powerful or
maneuverable, but the ship passed in every criterion that mattered and was
approved for mass production.
Due to their size, many
Nova Class starships could be built, however the need is not there and the
Novas are kept at reasonable rate of approximately 20 new ships a year.
Production was temporarily halted during the Dominion War, as the Nova Class
was unsuitable for warfare. However, production has resumed since the cessation
of the War and more new Novas are being constructed.
Though their missions are
frequently routine, one Nova Class has already gained some infamous
notoriety. The USS Equinox, NCC-72381 was lost some time ago. Third-hand
reports suggest it will never be found.
2.0 COMMAND SYSTEMS

2.1 MAIN BRIDGE
General Overview:
Primary operational control of the Nova Class is provided by the Main
Bridge, located in a recessed area just under the topmost area of the saucer
section.
The Main Bridge directly
supervises all primary mission operations and coordinates all departmental
activities.
The Main Bridge is not
an ejectable module.
Layout:
Due to the profile of
missions the Nova Class typically undertakes, the bridge aboard this
class of ship is designed for free range and ‘think tank’ style management. Much
of what the ship does is interrelated to a significant amount, and allowing the
ship’s top officers to interact freely in a work environment helps the missions
to operate at peak efficiency as a opposed to ships that operate ‘under sail’.
The ship’s commanding and
executive officers have chairs at the very center of the circular bridge in a
submerged location. In this manner, the bridge helps the idea that there is
‘work’ being done and the command staff are an integral part of it, rather than
the overseers.
The captain’s chair is
starboard side, and the executive officer’s is on the portside. Between them is
a console built into the structure that provides a place for information
dissemination, as well as operational command of the starship. On either side of
the command and executive officer’s chairs, are smooth benches, an architectural
element that can be used when necessary by extra officers on the bridge, as well
as visitors and other personnel by the permission of the command staff.
Directly ahead of the
command area and down into a further sunken area, is the Conn. This split
console is just forward of the viewscreen and houses enough space to be used in
the traditional Conn/Operations arrangement where necessary. Under most
conditions, the entire console is used for Helm/Navigation and Operations is
managed by one of the other stations.
To the port and starboard
sides of the command area are the doors on the upper level. The portside doors
lead to turbolifts and the Captain’s Ready Room, with the starboardside door
making way to an additional turbolift, as well as access to the crew head.
Behind the command area
is a large array of multi-use consoles that can be configured to run any
operation on the starship. Depending on mission condition, the majority of the
consoles will be set to a scientific function. However, other mission types
require a different approach.
When necessary, Tactical
is usually assigned to the forward, portside console just right of the main
viewscreen. Though it is not necessary for a tactical officer to see a visual
image of its target, they have traditionally been provided with positions where
they can assess the situation both by instrumentation, and their own eyes.
Tactical console configuration usage is extremely limited; only Beta-2 Tactical
clearance personnel can use it, and the user must input special codes to even
get access to the massive amounts of computer links that give tactical nearly
limitless information at the Nova Class’ disposal. For full access, the
console's security subsystem can run a battery of scans on the user, including
thermal, biological, retinal, and vocal tests. If all of these are passed, full
access to the ship's offensive and defensive systems is made available.
On the opposite side is
where Operations is most often handled. Portside, the operations console is
under the command of the Operations Manager, who oversees such important
elements of the ship as supply and outfitting, communications and power
distribution.
Directly behind the
captain and first officer’s chairs is the Master Systems Display. This dedicated
area allows any officer to get an abstract picture of the ship and any problems
that may arise. Its attached console allows certain situations to be dealt with
right in front of the MSD without further intervention.
On either side of the
Master Systems Display lie the Science consoles. Typically, the Chief Science
Officer mans the portside console, and the Assistant Science Officer the
opposite console. From the science consoles, the officers have priority access
to all sensor input coming into the ship. The science consoles can be used by
any personnel and have access to all science, navigational, sensor, and
communications systems.
At the rear, portside
console nearest the entrance doors lies the engineering bridge console. Manned
at all times, this console provides an engineer or technician access to all data
coming from the ship’s internal monitoring systems as well as access (where
necessary) to repair and adjust various systems throughout the ship.
Directly opposite on the
starboard side is the controls for the ship’s biological systems including life
support and environmental control. Additional controls can include monitoring
samples brought aboard, and managing biological tests being performed aboard the
Nova Class starship.
There are No escape pods
connected to the bridge. Pods are located on all decks below Deck 2. Each pod
can support two people for 72 hours in space, and has a maximum speed of half
impulse. Two pods are reserved for the top four officers in the chain of command
on the ship because they are the last four to leave the ship. These are located
on Deck 2. As the number of experienced Captains dwindles in Starfleet, the
notion of a Captain going down with his ship has been abolished. If the ship is
abandoned, the top four officers in the chain of command will wait until
everyone else is off the ship, opt to arm the auto-Destruct (not always
necessary, but there if needed), and then leave in the two escape pods.
2.2 MAIN ENGINEERING

Deck 7 on a Nova Class
starship is home to Main Engineering – the heart of the vessel. Main Engineering
contains equipment to manage and maintain nearly every system aboard the ship.
Staffed by technicians and engineers, Main Engineering is the second most
essential area of a Nova.
Protected at three points
with blast doors for internal and external security reasons, Main Engineering is
home to literally dozens of consoles and control points for the starship’s
equipment. The engineering room aboard a Nova is a very compact but deceptively
large environment. Strategically placed consoles provide more than adequate work
area for monitoring the ship as well as the vessel’s warp core.
Its main entrance, on
Deck 7, opens into a small corridor with banks of consoles on either side of the
‘hall’ for technicians to keep tabs on anything from environmental controls to
replicator repairs. This corridor opens into a larger, almost square room filled
with more consoles.
In the center of that
square is the ship’s warpcore. The Ceries F-Type Matter/Antimatter Reactor
Assembly (M/ARA) covers three decks in height with emergency ejection systems
located at the top to loose the warpcore that is then ejected from the ventral
engineering section of the ship in an emergency. Like all modern Engineering
rooms, the Nova’s Engineering Room is equipped with breathing masks and fire
suppression equipment in case of accidents. Additional measures include a 20
centimeter-thick door that can be extended to the ceiling to the floor in case
of a coolant leak inside Main Engineering. Due to the caustic nature of plasma
coolant, it must be fully vented before the computer will allow the doors to be
opened.
Access to the top of the
M/ARA is provided by a set of catwalks and doors that open on to Deck 6 where
further engineering systems are housed, including Deflector Control. Other
accesses include access ladders and Jeffries tubes spread around Main
Engineering, and additional corridors that extend further into the ship.
Aboard a Nova Class
starship, Main Engineering is under the supervision of the vessel’s Chief
Engineer who has an office to the rear of Main Engineering.
Typical crew compliment
in Main Engineering consists of three engineers and seven technicians of various
grades. During Red or Yellow Alert, that number is increased.
2.3 TACTICAL DEPARTMENT

This multi-room
department is located in a restricted area on Deck 4. Within it are the
entrances to the phaser range, the auxiliary weapon control room and to the
Ship's Armory, as well as the office of the Chief of Security.
Security Office:
The Chief of Security’s office is decorated to the officer's preference. It
contains a work area, a personal viewscreen, a computer display, and a
replicator.
Brig:
Located on Deck 4, the Brig is a restricted access area whose only entrance is
from within the Security department. The Nova Class vessel has one double
occupancy cell, which contains beds, a retractable table and chairs, a water
dispenser, and sanitary facilities. The cell is secured with a level-10
forcefield emitter built into each doorway.
Internal
Forcefields:
Controlled from the bridge or from the Security office on Deck 4, forcefields
can be activated throughout the ship, effectively sealing off sections of the
hallway from the remainder of the vessel.
Internal
Sensors:
Used to monitor the internal security of the ship. They can identify the
location of specific crewmembers that are wearing their commbadge. They can be
used to determine the general location of any person on board the ship, based on
the entry of specific variables by the Tactical officer.
Ship's Armory:
This room is located in a restricted area on Deck 4 and is under constant guard.
The room is sealed with a level 10 forcefield and can only be accessed by
personnel with Level-4 or above security clearance granted by the Command staff
or Chief of Security. Inside the armory is a work area for maintenance and
repair of phasers as well as multiple sealed weapon lockers. The Nova Class
carries enough type-I and type-II phasers to arm the entire crew. Type-III
phaser rifle and the new compression phaser rifles are available as well, but
only in enough numbers to arm approximately 1/3 of the crew. Heavy ordinance is
available in limited numbers.
Armory Inventory
includes:
30 Type-I Phasers
60 Type-II Phaser pistols
25 Type-III Phaser rifles
10 Type-IIIc Compression Phaser rifles
Personnel Phasers range in power settings from 1 (Light Stun) to 16 (Atomize).
Torpedo/Probe Magazine: These restricted areas on Deck 4 are
for storing unarmed photon torpedoes and warheads, and science probes I - VI
(VII - IX if mission dictates). Also stored here are the components for
manufacturing new photon torpedo as well as the equipment to put it all
together. These rooms are also accessed by the loading mechanism for the torpedo
launchers.
3.0 TACTICAL SYSTEMS

3.1 PHASERS
Phaser Array
Arrangement: Dorsal saucer section is covered by four phaser strips; two of
which extend from the aft curvature, along the length of the saucer and stop
short of the auxiliary deflector incision. The aft firing arc is covered by two
smaller arrays angled on the rear of the saucer section. The relative bottom of
the ship is protected by two similar arrays as on the Dorsal, extending to the
rear of the saucer and following the curve to the aux deflector incision.
Additional protection is provided by a single array that extends laterally
across the ventral engineering hull just fore of the warpcore ejection port. Far
aft strips placed laterally on either side of the main shuttlebay on the dorsal
engineering hull cover the rearmost firing arc for a total of nine phaser
strips.
Phaser Array Type: Even though the Nova Class is a small vessel, it
still utilizes the Type-IX array system. The six arrays are all Type-IX, the new
standard emitter. Each array fires a steady beam of phaser energy, and the
forced-focus emitters discharge the phasers at speeds approaching .986c (which
works out to about 182,520 miles per second - nearly warp one). The phaser array
automatically rotates phaser frequency and attempts to lock onto the frequency
and phase of a threat vehicle's shields for shield penetration.
Phaser Array Output:
Each phaser array takes its energy directly from the impulse drive and auxiliary
fusion generators. Individually, each Type-IX emitter can only discharge
approximately 6.0 MW (megawatts). However, several emitters (usually two) fire
at once in the array during standard firing procedures, resulting in a discharge
approximately 12 MW.
Phaser Array Range:
Maximum effective range is 300,000 kilometers.
Primary purpose:
Defense/Anti-Spacecraft
Secondary purpose:
Assault
3.2 TORPEDO LAUNCHERS

Arrangement:
Three standard torpedo launchers. Two fore, and one aft. Torpedo tubes one and
two (fore), are located on either side of the auxiliary deflector just forward
of the incision. The tubes are recessed into the ‘prongs’ and can fire as many
as two torpedoes per forward salvo, making a total forward salvo of four
torpedoes per firing. Aft coverage is handled by a third torpedo launcher facing
the rear of the ship in the upper engineering hull near where it meets the
saucer.
Type: Type-6,
Mark-XXV photon torpedo, capable of pattern firing (sierra, etc.) as well as
independent launch. Independent targeting once launched from the ship,
detonation on contact unless otherwise directed by the ship.
Payload:
The Nova Class can carry a maximum of 55 torpedo casings with at least 15
of them geared as probe casings at any one time.
Range:
Maximum effective range is 3,500,000 kilometers.
Primary purpose:
Assault
Secondary purpose:
Anti-Spacecraft
3.3 DEFLECTOR SHIELDS

Type: Asymmetrical
peristaltic subspace graviton field. This type of shield is similar to those of
most other Starships, but rated higher than most vessels of equivalent size as a
defensive measure due to it’s role in hosting conferences and ferrying VIPs.
Other than incorporating the now mandatory nutational shift in frequency, the
shields alter their graviton polarity to better deal with more powerful weapons
and sophisticated weaponry (including Dominion, Breen, and Borg systems).
During combat, the shield
sends data on what type of weapon is being used on it, and what frequency and
phase the weapon uses. Once the tactical officer analyzes this, the shield can
be configured to have the same frequency as the incoming weapon - but different
nutation. This tactic dramatically increases shield efficiency.
Output: There are 11
shield grids on the Nova Class and each one generates 145.5 MW, resulting
in total shield strength of 1,595 MW. The power for the shields is taken
directly from the warp engines and impulse fusion generators. If desired, the
shields can be augmented by power from the impulse power plants. The shields can
protect against approximately 42% of the total EM spectrum (whereas a Galaxy
Class Starship's shields can only protect against about 23%), made possible by
the multi-phase graviton polarity flux technology incorporated into the shields.
Range:
The shields, when raised maintain an average range is 30 meters away from the
hull.
Primary purpose:
Defense from hazardous radiation and space-borne particulates.
Secondary purpose:
Defense from enemy threat forces
4.0 COMPUTER SYSTEMS

4.1 COMPUTER CORE
Number of computer
cores: One. The primary computer core is accessed in the control room on
Deck 2. It covers three decks and extends from Deck 2 to Deck 4. It is fed by
two sets of redundant EPS conduits as well as primary power.
Type: The V-109
primary computer assembly is built specifically for the Nova Class
starship by Viscosity Computing on Argos-IV.
The structure of the
computer is similar to that of most other supercomputing systems in use by
Federation vessels with stack segments extending through the ship forming
trillions of trillions of connections through the processing and storage
abilities of modern isolinear chips.
Cooling of the isolinear loop is accomplished by a regenerative liquid helium
loop, which has been refit to allow a delayed-venting heat storage unit for
"Silent Running.” For missions, requirements on the computer core rarely exceed
45-50% of total core processing and storage capacity. The rest of the core is
utilized for various scientific, tactical, or intelligence gathering missions -
or to backup data in the event of a damaged core.
4.2 LCARS

Acronym
for Library Computer Access and Retrieval System,
the common user interface of 24th century computer systems, based on verbal and
graphically enhanced keyboard/display input and output. The graphical interface
adapts to the task, which is supposed to be performed, allowing for maximum
ease-of-use. The Nova Class operates on LCARS build version 4 to account
for increases in processor speed and power, limitations discovered in the field
in earlier versions, and increased security.
4.3 SECURITY
LEVELS

Access to all Starfleet
data is highly regulated. A standard set of access levels have been programmed
into the computer cores of all ships in order to stop any undesired access to
confidential data.
Security levels are also variable, and task-specific. Certain areas of the
ship are restricted to unauthorized personnel, regardless of security level.
Security levels can also be raised, lowered, or revoked by Command personnel.
Security levels in use aboard the Nova Class are:
- Level
10 – Captain and Above
- Level
9 – First Officer
- Level
8 - Commander
- Level
7 – Lt. Commander
- Level
6 – Lieutenant
- Level
5 – Lt. Junior Grade
- Level
4 - Ensign
- Level
3 – Non-Commissioned Crew
- Level
2 – Civilian Personnel
- Level
1 – Open Access (Read Only)
Note:
Security Levels beyond current rank can and are bestowed where, when and to whom
they are necessary.
The
main computer grants access based on a battery of checks to the individual user,
including face and voice recognition in conjunction with a vocal code as an
added level of security.
4.4 UNIVERSAL TRANSLATOR

All Starfleet vessels make
use of a computer program called a Universal Translator that is employed for
communication among persons who speak different languages. It performs a pattern
analysis of an unknown language based on a variety of criteria to create a
translation matrix. The translator is built in the Starfleet badge and small
receivers are implanted in the ear canal.
The Universal Translator
matrix aboard Nova Class starships consists of well over 100,000
languages and increases with every new encounter.
5.0 PROPULSION SYSTEMS

5.1 WARP PROPULSION SYSTEM
Type:
F-Type Standard Matter/Anti-Matter Reaction Drive, developed by Ceries
Industries. Information on this Warp Drive can be found in any Starfleet Library
or Omnipedia.
Normal Cruising Speed:
Warp 6
Cruising Speed as
pursuant to Warp Limitations, as a cause of subspace pollution: Warp 6.3
Maximum Speed:
Warp 8 for 12 hours
Note: Vessels equipped with the Ceries F-Type M/ARA Drive System no longer have
the maximum cruising speed limit of Warp 6.3, thanks to innovations discovered
and utilized in the M/ARA Warp Drive outfitted in the new Intrepid Class
Starship. Pursuant to Starfleet Command Directive 12856.A, all Starships will
receive upgrades to their Warp Drive system to prevent further pollution of
Subspace.
5.2 IMPULSE PROPULSION SYSTEM

Type:
Outfitted with a single T2-16 fusion powered impulse engine, the Nova Class
carries more than enough thrust to maneuver at her fully laden weight. Built by
Tallier Propulsion, the T2-16 is lauded for its reliability under extended use,
as well as its fuel efficiency.
Output: The
impulse engine can propel the Nova Class at speeds just under .25c, at
“Full Impulse” and an upper ceiling of .75c at three quarters the speed of
light. Generally, Starfleet Vessels are restricted to .25c speeds to avoid the
more dramatic time dilation effects of higher relativistic speeds. However, such
restrictions can be overridden at the behest of the ship’s captain.
5.3 REACTION CONTROL SYSTEM

Type:
Standard Version 3 magneto-hydrodynamic gas-fusion thrusters.
Output: Each
thruster quad can produce 3.9 million Newtons of exhaust.
6.0 UTILITIES AND
AUXILIARY SYSTEMS

6.1 NAVIGATION DEFLECTOR
A
standard Nova Class main deflector dish is located in the engineering
hull, and is located just forward of the primary engineering spaces. Composed of
molybdenum/duranium mesh panels over a tritanium framework (beneath the
Duranium-Tritanium
hull), the dish can
be manually moved twelve degrees in any direction off the ship's Z-axis. The
main deflector dish's shield and sensor power comes from two graviton polarity
generators located on Deck 6, each capable of generating 128 MW, which can be
fed into two 480 millicochrane subspace field distortion generators.
6.2 TRACTOR BEAM

Type: Multiphase
subspace graviton beam, used for direct manipulation of objects from a submicron
to a macroscopic level at any relative bearing to the ship. Each emitter is
directly mounted to the primary members of the ship's framework, to lessen the
effects of isopiestic subspace shearing, inertial potential imbalance, and
mechanical stress.
Output: Each
tractor beam emitter is built around three multiphase 15 MW graviton polarity
sources, each feeding two 475-millicochrane subspace field amplifiers. Phase
accuracy is within 1.3 arc-seconds per microsecond, which gives superior
interference pattern control. Each emitter can gain extra power from the SIF by
means of molybdenum-jacketed wave-guides. The subspace fields generated around
the beam (when the beam is used) can envelop objects up to 920 meters, lowering
the local gravitational constant of the universe for the region inside the field
and making the object much easier to manipulate.
Range: Effective
tractor beam range varies with payload mass and desired delta-v (change in
relative velocity). Assuming a nominal 15 m/sec-squared delta-v, the multiphase
tractor emitters can be used with a payload approaching 116,380,000,000 metric
tons at less than 2,000 meters. Conversely, the same delta-v can be imparted to
an object massing about one metric ton at ranges approaching 30,000 kilometers.
Primary purpose:
Towing or manipulation of objects
Secondary purpose: Tactical/Defensive
6.3 TRANSPORTER SYSTEMS

Number of Systems:
5
Personnel Transporters:
1
- Max
Payload Mass: 900kg (1,763 lbs)
- Max
Range: 40,000 km
- Max
Beam Up/Out Rate: Approx. 100 persons per hour per Transporter
Cargo Transporters:
1
- Max
Payload Mass: 800 metric tons. Standard operation is molecular resolution
(Non-Lifeform).
- Set
for quantum (Lifeform) resolution: 1 metric ton
- Max
Beam Up/Out Rate (Quantum Setting): Approx. 100 persons per hour per
Transporter
Emergency Transporters:
2
- 6.4 COMMUNICATIONS

Standard Communications Range: 30,000 – 90,000 kilometers
Standard Data Transmission Speed: 18.5 kiloquads per second
Subspace Communications Speed: Warp 9.9997
7.0 SCIENCE AND REMOTE
SENSING SYSTEMS

7.1 SENSOR SYSTEMS
Long
range and navigation sensors are located behind the main deflector dish, to
avoid sensor "ghosts" and other detrimental effects consistent with main
deflector dish millicochrane static field output. Lateral sensor pallets are
located around the rim of the entire Starship, providing full coverage in all
standard scientific fields, but with emphasis in the following areas:
-
Astronomical phenomena
-
Planetary analysis
-
Remote life-form analysis
-
EM scanning
-
Passive neutrino scanning
-
Parametric subspace field stress
(a scan to search for cloaked ships)
-
Thermal variances
-
Quasi-stellar material
Each
sensor pallet (11 in all) can be interchanged and re-calibrated with any other
pallet on the ship. Warp Current sensor: This is an independent subspace
graviton field-current scanner, allowing the ship to track ships at high warp by
locking onto the eddy currents from the threat ship's warp field, then follow
the currents by using multi-model image mapping.
The Nova Class starship is equipped with two high-power science sensor
pallets in the forward saucer section, ventral side. The pallets are unplated
for ease of upgrade and repair, as well as enhancing sensor acuity.
7.2 TACTICAL SENSORS

There
are 10 independent tactical sensors on the <Ship Name>. Each sensor
automatically tracks and locks onto incoming hostile vessels and reports
bearing, aspect, distance, and vulnerability percentage to the tactical station
on the main bridge. Each tactical sensor is approximately 90% efficient against
ECM, and can operate fairly well in particle flux nebulae (which has been
hitherto impossible).
7.3 STELLAR CARTOGRAPHY

One
Stellar Cartography Bay is located on Deck 5, with direct EPS power feed from
Engineering. All information is directed to the bridge and can be displayed on
any console or the main viewscreen. When under warp or staffed by demand, the
Stellar Cartography Bay is manned by on supervising officer and as many as three
subordinates.
7.4 SCIENCE LABS

There
are 16 science labs on the Nova Class starship, four of which are
non-specific labs that can be easily modified for various scientific endeavors
including Bio/Chem, and Physics tests and/or experiments – crews rotate often
among these laboratories. Located mostly on Deck 4 with small auxiliaries in
other areas of the ship where appropriate, the Nova Class’ laboratories
are well equipped due to the nature of their mission profile. More specific and
specialized laboratories include Atmospheric Physics, as well as the more
dangerous High-Energy Physics (note: additional SIF Field Generators are
installed in the bulkheads around this lab).
Additional laboratories include a
Botany Lab, where
experiments and studies are done on the various phylum found on the surfaces of
planets being surveyed, as well as development of better, more robust
terraforming flora for use in colonization. The Geology Laboratories cover two
major areas, Planetary and Astronomical. Though a good portion of the Nova’s
time is spent in-system, other missions may include studying astronomical
phenomena and these laboratories are provided for that purpose. Other
laboratories study genetics and Xenobiology.
Spending a year at a time away, the Nova Class’ computer core is one of
the few that uses a significant part of its processing and storage capacity. The
data collected is usually offloaded at a starbase where it can be audited and
distributed among the fleets.
7.5 PROBES

A probe is a device that
contains a number of general purpose or mission specific sensors and can be
launched from a starship for closer examination of objects in space.
There
are nine different classes of probes, which vary in sensor types, power, and
performance ratings. The spacecraft frame of a probe consists of molded
duranium-tritanium and pressure-bonded lufium boronate, with sensor windows of
triple layered transparent aluminum. With a warhead attached, a probe becomes a
photon torpedo. The standard equipment of all nine types of probes are
instruments to detect and analyze all normal EM and subspace bands, organic and
inorganic chemical compounds, atmospheric constituents, and mechanical force
properties. All nine types are capable of surviving a powered atmospheric entry,
but only three are special designed for aerial maneuvering and soft landing.
These ones can also be used for spatial burying. Many probes can be real-time
controlled and piloted from a starship to investigate an environment dangerous
hostile or otherwise inaccessible for an away-team.
The
nine standard classes are:
-
7.5.1 Class I Sensor
Probe:

- Range: 2 x 10^5
kilometers
- Delta-v limit: 0.5c
- Powerplant: Vectored
deuterium microfusion propulsion
- Sensors: Full EM/Subspace
and interstellar chemistry pallet for in-space applications.
- Telemetry: 12,500
channels at 12 megawatts.
-
-
7.5.2 Class II Sensor
Probe:
-

Range: 4 x 10^5
kilometers
- Delta-v limit: 0.65c
- Powerplant: Vectored
deuterium microfusion propulsion, extended deuterium fuel supply
- Sensors: Same
instrumentation as Class I with addition of enhanced long-range particle and
field detectors and imaging system
- Telemetry: 15,650
channels at 20 megawatts.
-
-
7.5.3 Class III Planetary
Probe:

- Range: 1.2 x 10^6
kilometers
- Delta-v limit: 0.65c
- Powerplant: Vectored
deuterium microfusion propulsion
- Sensors: Terrestrial
and gas giant sensor pallet with material sample and return capability;
onboard chemical analysis submodule
- Telemetry: 13,250
channels at ~15 megawatts.
- Additional data:
Limited SIF hull reinforcement. Full range of terrestrial soft landing to
subsurface penetration missions; gas giant atmosphere missions survivable to 450
bar pressure. Limited terrestrial loiter time.
-
-
7.5.4 Class IV Stellar
Encounter Probe:

- Range: 3.5 x 10^6
kilometers
- Delta-v limit: 0.6c
- Powerplant: Vectored
deuterium microfusion propulsion supplemented with continuum driver coil and
extended deuterium supply
- Sensors: Triply
redundant stellar fields and particle detectors, stellar atmosphere analysis
suite.
- Telemetry: 9,780
channels at 65 megawatts.
- Additional data: Six
ejectable/survivable radiation flux subprobes. Deployable for nonstellar
energy phenomena
-
-
7.5.5 Class V
Medium-Range Reconnaissance Probe:

- Range: 4.3 x 10^10
kilometers
- Delta-v limit: Warp 2
- Powerplant: Dual-mode
matter/antimatter engine; extended duration sublight plus limited duration at
warp
- Sensors: Extended
passive data-gathering and recording systems; full autonomous mission
execution and return system
- Telemetry: 6,320
channels at 2.5 megawatts.
- Additional data:
Planetary atmosphere entry and soft landing capability. Low observatory
coatings and hull materials. Can be modified for tactical applications with
addition of custom sensor countermeasure package.
-
7.5.6 Class VI Comm
Relay/Emergency Beacon:

- Range: 4.3 x 10^10
kilometers
- Delta-v limit: 0.8c
- Powerplant:
Microfusion engine with high-output MHD power tap
- Sensors: Standard
pallet
- Telemetry/Comm: 9,270
channel RF and subspace transceiver operating at 350 megawatts peak radiated
power. 360 degree omni antenna coverage, 0.0001 arc-second high-gain antenna
pointing resolution.
- Additional data:
Extended deuterium supply for transceiver power generation and planetary orbit
plane changes
-
7.5.7Class VII Remote
Culture Study Probe:

- Range: 4.5 x 10^8
kilometers
- Delta-v limit: Warp
1.5
- Powerplant: Dual-mode
matter/antimatter engine
- Sensors: Passive data
gathering system plus subspace transceiver
- Telemetry: 1,050
channels at 0.5 megawatts.
- Additional data:
Applicable to civilizations up to technology level III. Low observability
coatings and hull materials. Maximum loiter time: 3.5 months. Low-impact
molecular destruct package tied to antitamper detectors.
-
7.5.8 Class VIII
Medium-Range Multimission Warp Probe:

- Range: 1.2 x 10^2
light-years
- Delta-v limit: Warp 9
- Powerplant:
Matter/antimatter warp field sustainer engine; duration of 6.5 hours at warp
9; MHD power supply tap for sensors and subspace transceiver
- Sensors: Standard
pallet plus mission-specific modules
- Telemetry: 4,550
channels at 300 megawatts.
- Additional data:
Applications vary from galactic particles and fields research to early-warning
reconnaissance missions
-
7.5.9 Class IX Long-Range
Multimission Warp Probe:

- Range: 7.6 x 10^2
light-years
- Delta-v limit: Warp 9
- Powerplant:
Matter/antimatter warp field sustainer engine; duration of 12 hours at warp 9;
extended fuel supply for warp 8 maximum flight duration of 14 days
- Sensors: Standard
pallet plus mission-specific modules
- Telemetry: 6,500
channels at 230 megawatts.
- Additional data:
Limited payload capacity; isolinear memory storage of 3,400 kiloquads;
fifty-channel transponder echo. Typical application is emergency-log/message
capsule on homing trajectory to nearest starbase or known Starfleet vessel
position
8.0 CREW SUPPORT
SYSTEMS

8.1 MEDICAL SYSTEMS
Sickbay:
There is an adequate sickbay facility located on Deck 3, equipped with ICU and
Biohazard Support, a Radiation Treatment Wards that doubles as a Surgical Ward,
a ward for Null-Gravity Treatment and Isolation Suites There is also a Morgue,
and dental care is handled in the main ward. The Chief Medical Officer’s
office is attached to Sickbay, and the main ward contains a load-out of four
standard biobeds, with ten more in the main treatment ward, and a small
complement of emergency cots. Pursuant to new Medical Protocols, all Medical
Facilities are equipped with holo-emitters for the emergency usage of the
Emergency Medical Hologram System.
Counselor’s Office:
The Counselor’s office is also located on Deck 3 to assure a more
efficient medical treatment environment. Though small, the office is nicely
decorated and comfortable for the patient. There are no visual sensors in this
office and audio recordings are done only with the voice code of the Counselor.
It has
standard furnishings (decorated to the Counselors preference), a personal
viewscreen, a computer display, a replicator, and a washroom/head. It has an
individual therapy room furnished with chairs and couch for one-on-one sessions.
In the event
of a crewmember suffering a psychotic episode, and needing to be isolated from
the crew, the ill crewman is kept in sickbay, in the isolation unit, or in the
intensive care units, as determined by bed availability.
8.2 CREW QUARTERS SYSTEMS

General Overview:
Due to the small size of the Nova Class, and its internal arrangement of
systems and laboratories, crew accommodations are distributed through every deck
of the ship
Individuals assigned to a
Nova Class for periods over six months are permitted to reconfigure their
quarters within hardware, volume, and mass limits. Individuals assigned for
shorter periods are generally restricted to standard quarters configuration.
Crew Quarters:
Standard Living Quarters
are provided for both Starfleet and non-commissioned crew. Aboard a Nova
Class, bringing families aboard is usually discouraged due to the lengthy
‘working’ missions.
Crewmen can request that
their living quarters be combined to create a single larger dwelling.
Officers' Quarters:
Starfleet personnel from the rank of Ensign up to Lieutenant Commander are given
one set of quarters to themselves (cohabitation is not required).
These accommodations
typically include a small bathroom, a bedroom (with standard bed), a living/work
area, a food replicator, an ultrasonic shower, personal holographic viewer, and
provisions for pets.
Officers may request that
their living quarters be combined to form one large dwelling.
Executive Quarters:
The Captain and Executive Officer of the Nova Class both have special,
much larger quarters.
These quarters are much
more luxurious than any others on the ship, with the exception of the VIP Guest
quarters. Both the Executive Officer's and the Captain's quarters are larger
than standard Officers Quarters, and this space generally has the following
accommodations: a bedroom (with a nice, fluffy bed), living/work area, bathroom,
food replicator, ultrasonic shower, old-fashioned water shower, personal
holographic viewer, and even provisions for pets.
VIP/Diplomatic Guest Quarters: Though not ideally suited for
diplomacy, the Nova Class (like all Starfleet Vessels) provide
accommodations for special guests and visiting personnel aboard the ship. Though
not as well appointed as on most vessels, the Nova’s VIP quarters are more than
adequate.
These quarters are
located on Deck 6. These quarters include a bedroom, spacious living/work area,
personal viewscreen, ultrasonic shower, bathtub/water shower, and provisions for
pets, a food replicator, and a null-grav sleeping chamber. These quarters can be
immediately converted to class H, K, L, N, and N2 environments.
8.3 RECREATIONAL SYSTEMS

General Overview:
Small ships tend not to be as well equipped as larger vessels in Starfleet.
Though all are well attired, smaller vessels do not come with all the fringe
benefits of a large ship, such as a Galaxy or Ambassador Class. The Nova
Class is such a small ship, and what recreational capabilities it does have
are taken advantage of on long missions of up to a year.
Holodecks:
There are two holodecks aboard the Nova Class. Located on Deck 3, these
Holodecks are proprietary Federation Technology and can comfortably support up
to 10 people at a time.
Target Range:
Test of skill is an important form of recreation in many cultures, and the
Nova Class provides a facility especially for such pursuits. The facility
sports self-healing polymer absorptive targets for a variety of projectile and
bladed weapons firing and/or tossing. In the rear of the Target Range facility
is a locked area protected by forcefield in which phased weapons firing is done.
The phaser range is also
used by security to train ship's personnel in marksmanship. During training, the
holo-emitters in the phaser range are activated, creating a holographic setting,
similar to what a holodeck does. Personnel are "turned loose;" either
independently or in an Away Team formation to explore the setting presented to
them, and the security officer in charge will take notes on the performance of
each person as they take cover, return fire, protect each other, and perform a
variety of different scenarios. All personnel on a Nova Class are tested
every six months in phaser marksmanship.
Gym Facilities:
Some degree of physical fitness is a requirement for Starfleet Officers and all
starships provide some sort of facilities to maintain that aboard. Due to the
small size of the Nova Class, those facilities are not as spacious as
other vessels. Perhaps a dozen multi-use machines dot the workout area, as well
as mats and a special area for physical training.
An emergency medical kit
is located in an easily visible location near the door to the Gym.
8.4 CREW MESS

The crew mess hall serves
double duty aboard the Nova Class because of its small size. Located in
the forward section of Deck 2, the Mess is equipped with a two mass-use food
replicators with an extensive recipe listing from over two hundred worlds.
Eating accommodations are provided by a slew of tables with a small row of
molded couches and chairs that follow the forward curve of the mess hall and
face the large viewports on either side of the hall.
The Mess Hall has a
battery of recreational games and assorted "stuff.” 3-D chess, octagonal
billiards tables, and a storage center with more eclectic games such as Plak-tow
can be found in the mess hall.
9.0 AUXILIARY
SPACECRAFT SYSTEMS

9.1 MAIN
SHUTTLEBAY
General Overview:
Located in the aft dorsal portion of the engineering section, the Main
Shuttlebay is the primary port for entrance and egress, as well as management of
the Nova Class’ auxiliary craft and shuttles. The Main Shuttlebay is
managed by a team of Helmsmen/Pilots, Engineers and Technicians, and Operations
personnel that are based on the Flight Operations office under the
supervision of the Flight Control Officer.
The Nova Class
Main Shuttlebay is equipped with:
- Two
Type-9 Medium Long-Range Shuttlecraft
-
Ordinance and Fuel
-
Flight Operations
9.2 AUXILIARY SHUTTLEBAY
General Overview:
Just forward and up from the Main Shuttlebay is the Nova Class Auxiliary
Shuttlebay. Smaller in size and scope, the Auxiliary Shuttlebay houses the
cold-storage facilities for its auxiliary craft, as well as additional
maintenance areas. When not in use, the Auxiliary Shuttlebay is kept locked and
only opened for regular maintenance checks.
The
Nova Class Auxiliary Shuttlebay is equipped with:
-
2 Type-16 Shuttlepods
-
2 Workbee-type
Maintenance Pods.
9.3 SHUTTLECRAFT
9.3.1 TYPE-9 PERSONNEL SHUTTLE

Type:
Medium long-range warp shuttle.
Accommodation: Two flight crew, two passengers.
Power Plant: One 400 cochrane warp engine, two 800 millicochrane impulse
engines, four RCS thrusters.
Dimensions: Length, 8.5 m; beam, 4.61 m; height 2.67 m.
Mass: 2.61 metric tones.
Performance: Warp 6.
Armament: Two Type-VI phaser emitters.
The Type-9 Personnel
Shuttle is a long-range craft capable of traveling at high warp for extended
periods of time due to new advances in variable geometry warp physics. Making
its debut just before the launch of the Intrepid-class, this shuttle type is
ideal for scouting and recon missions, but is well suited to perform many
multi-mission tasks. Equipped with powerful Type-VI phaser emitters, the
shuttle is designed to hold its own ground for a longer period of time.
Comfortable seating for four and moderate cargo space is still achieved without
sacrificing speed and maneuverability. As is standard by the 2360’s, the
shuttle is equipped with a medium-range transporter and is capable of traveling
through a planet’s atmosphere. With its ability to travel at high-warp speeds,
the Type-9 has been equipped with a more pronounced deflector dish that houses a
compact long-range sensor that further helps it in its role as a scout. The
Type-9 is now being deployed throughout the fleet and is especially aiding
deep-space exploratory ships with its impressive abilities.
9.3.2 TYPE-16 SHUTTLEPOD

Type:
Medium short-range sublight shuttle.
Accommodation: Two; pilot and system manager.
Power Plant: Two 750 millicochrane impulse driver engines, four RCS
thrusters, four sarium krellide storage cells.
Dimensions: Length, 4.8 m; beam, 2.4 m; height 1.6 m.
Mass: 1.25 metric tones.
Performance: Maximum delta-v, 12,250 m/sec.
Armament: Two Type-IV phaser emitters.
Like the Type-15, the
Type-16 Shuttlepod is a two person craft primarily used for short-ranged
transportations of personnel and cargo, as well as for extravehicular
inspections of Federation starships, stations and associated facilities.
Lacking the ability to obtain warp speeds, the Type-16 is a poor candidate for
even interplanetary travel, and is traditionally used as a means of transport
between objects only a few kilometers apart. The craft is capable of
atmospheric flight, allowing for routine flights between orbiting craft or
stations and planetside facilities, and its cargo capacity is slightly higher
then that of the Type-15. Ships of this type are stationed aboard various
starship classes and stations, both spaceborne and planetside.
9.3.3 WORK BEE

Type:
Utility craft.
Accommodation: One operator.
Power Plant: One microfusion reactor, four RCS thrusters.
Dimensions: Length, 4.11 m; beam, 1.92 m; height 1.90 m.
Mass: 1.68 metric tones.
Performance: Maximum delta-v, 4,000 m/sec.
Armament: None
The Work Bee is a
capable stand-alone craft used for inspection of spaceborne hardware, repairs,
assembly, and other activates requiring remote manipulators. The fully
pressurized craft has changed little in design during the past 150 years,
although periodic updates to the internal systems are done routinely. Onboard
fuel cells and microfusion generators can keep the craft operational for 76.4
hours, and the life-support systems can provide breathable air, drinking water
and cooling for the pilot for as long as fifteen hours. If the pilot is wearing
a pressure suit or SEWG, the craft allows for the operator to exit while
conducting operations. Entrance and exit is provided by the forward window,
which lifts vertically to allow the pilot to come and go.
A pair of robotic
manipulator arms is folded beneath the main housing, and allows for work to be
done through pilot-operated controls. In addition, the Work Bee is capable of
handling a cargo attachment that makes it ideal for transferring cargo around
large Starbase and spaceborne construction facilities. The cargo attachment
features additional microfusion engines for supporting the increased mass.
9.4 WAVERIDER CRAFT
Type:
Nova Class WaveRider Craft
Accommodation: 3 flight crew, 3 passengers
Power Plant: 3 Magnodynamic thrusters (Aft), fusion core, maneuvering
thrusters.
Dimensions: Length: 16.8m; Width: 14.5m; Height: 3.1m
Performance: Impulse: .25c, Atmospheric: Mach-12
Armament: 2 Type-IV Phaser Arrays.
An auxiliary craft for
Nova Class Survey Vessels, the WaveRider-Type atmospheric shuttlecraft is
designed to facilitate close quarters examination and survey of planetary bodies
by science personnel aboard the ship.
At just over 20 meters in length, the vessel is small enough to be carried by
the Nova Class but large enough to be useful. Intended to work in
atmosphere, the small craft is high fuel efficient at Mach-5 and above, making
use of the conventional propulsion with back up impulse and RCS thrusters for
maneuvering in space.
Unlike ordinary shuttlecraft, the WaveRider does not enter the ship’s Main and
Auxiliary Shuttlebays; instead, it inserts itself into a recessed port in the
ventral part of the saucer just forward of the main sensor dome. Access to the
WaveRider is provided by a hatchway inside the ship and a ladder-equipped hard
umbilical.
It is not warp capable.
10.0 NOVA CLASS
FLIGHT OPERATIONS

Operations aboard a
Nova Class starship fall under one of three categories: Flight Operations,
Primary Mission Operations, or Secondary Mission Operations.
Flight Operations
are all operations that relate directly to the function of the starship itself,
which include power generation, starship upkeep, environmental systems, and any
other system that is maintained and used to keep the vessel space worthy.
Primary Mission
Operations entail
all tasks assigned and directed from the Main Bridge, and typically require full
control and discretion over ship navigation and ship's resources.
Secondary Mission
operations are
those operations that are not under the direct control of the Main Bridge, but
do not impact Primary Mission Operations. Some examples of secondary mission
operations include long-range cultural, diplomatic, or scientific programs run
by independent or semi-autonomous groups aboard the starship.
10.1 MISSION TYPES

Seeking out new worlds
and new civilizations is central to all that Starfleet stands for. The Nova
Class Survey Vessel facilitates this, outfitted for long-duration missions
over planets and systems, cataloging and monitoring anything and everything of
interest inside a designated area.
Mission for a Nova
Class starship may fall into one of the following categories, in order of
her strongest capable mission parameter to her weakest mission parameter.
-
Ongoing Scientific Investigation:
A Nova Class starship is equipped with scientific laboratories
and a wide variety of sensor probes and sensor arrays, as well as the
state-of-the-art dorsal subspace sensor assembly; giving her the ability to
perform a wide variety of ongoing scientific investigations.
-
Contact with Alien Lifeforms:
Pursuant to Starfleet Policy regarding the discovery of new life, facilities
aboard the Nova Class include a variety of exobiology and
xenobiological suites, and a small cultural anthropology staff, allowing for
limited deep-space life form study and interaction.
-
Federation Policy and Diplomacy:
A Nova Class starship’s secondary role is the performance of diplomatic
operations on behalf of Starfleet and the United Federation of Planets. These
missions may include transport of Delegates, hosting of negotiations or
conferences aboard in the vessel’s Conference Hall, courier for important
people and/or items, and first contact scenarios.
-
Tactical/Defensive Operations:
Though not designed primarily for battle, the Nova Class –like all
Starfleet vessels– is designed to be resilient and ably armed.
-
Emergency/Search and Rescue:
Typical Missions include answering standard Federation emergency beacons,
extraction of Federation or Non-Federation citizens in distress, retrieval of
Federation or Non-Federation spacecraft in distress. Planetary evacuation is
not feasible.
10.2 OPERATING MODES

The normal flight and
mission operations of the Nova Class starship are conducted in accordance
with a variety of Starfleet standard operating rules, determined by the current
operational state of the starship. These operational states are determined by
the Commanding Officer, although in certain specific cases, the Computer can
automatically adjust to a higher alert status.
The major operating modes
are:
-
Cruise Mode -
The normal operating condition of the ship.
-
Yellow Alert -
Designates a ship wide state of increased preparedness for possible crisis
situations.
-
Red Alert -
Designates an actual state of emergency in which the ship or crew is
endangered, immediately impending emergencies, or combat situations.
-
Blue Alert –
Mode used aboard ships with planet fall capability when landing mode is
initialized.
-
External Support Mode
- State of
reduced activity that exists when a ship is docked at a starbase or other
support facility.
-
Reduced Power Mode
- This protocol
is invoked in case of a major failure in spacecraft power generation, in case
of critical fuel shortage, or in the event that a tactical situation requires
severe curtailment of onboard power generation.
During Cruise Mode, the
ship’s operations are run on three 8-hour shifts designated Alpha, Beta, and
Gamma. Should a crisis develop, it may revert to a four-shift system of six
hours to keep crew fatigue down.
Typical
Shift command is as follows:
Alpha
Shift – Captain (CO)
Beta Shift – Executive Officer (XO)
Gamma Shift – Rotated amongst Senior Officers
10.3 LANDING MODE

Nova Class
vessels are capable of atmospheric entry and egress with equipment worked into
the physical design of the starship. Each Nova Class vessel is equipped
with anti-gravity generators as well as impulse and RCS lifters strategically
placed at the mass and stress points on the bottom portion of the engineering
section.
During Blue Alert, the
Nova Class lowers the projection sphere of the deflector shields and assumes
an angle of attack perpendicular to the angular rotation of the planetary body
if it has an atmosphere. This allows the vessel’s shape to work as a lifting
body with air traveling under the broad and flat saucer and under the wing-like
nacelle struts. Once in the atmosphere, navigation is controlled with RCS
thrusters and use of the aft impulse engines.
It is standard procedure
to lower the landing gear at approximately 2500m above the Landing Zone (LZ)
surface, regardless of LZ altitude. This minimizes the drag on the vessel. Once
prepared for landing, Aft impulse engines are shut down and four vents on the
ventral hull are opened.
These vents cover the
ventral impulse thrust plates. Impulse engines in miniature, the thrust plates
serve only to provide lift to the Nova Class as the anti-gravity
generators effectively reduce its weight. The RCS thrusters provide final
maneuvering power.
Once on the ground, crew
or equipment can be transported to the surface from the vessel, or use the
ship’s turbolift system that connects to channels inside the landing struts
themselves, and open out near the ‘feet’.
Take-off is done in
reverse.
10.4
MAINTENANCE

Though much of a modern
starship’s systems are automated, they do require regular maintenance and
upgrade. Maintenance is typically the purview of the Engineering, but personnel
from certain divisions that are more familiar with them can also maintain
specific systems.
Maintenance of onboard systems is almost constant, and varies in severity.
Everything from fixing a stubborn replicator, to realigning the Dilithium matrix
is handled by technicians and engineers on a regular basis. Not all systems are
checked centrally by Main Engineering; to do so would occupy too much computer
time by routing every single process to one location. To alleviate that, systems
are compartmentalized by deck and location for checking. Department heads are
expected to run regular diagnostics of their own equipment and report anomalies
to Engineering to be fixed.
Systems Diagnostics
All key operating
systems and subsystems aboard the ship have a number of preprogrammed
diagnostic software and procedures for use when actual or potential malfunctions
are experienced. These various diagnostic protocols are generally classified
into five different levels, each offering a different degree of crew
verification of automated tests. Which type of diagnostic is used in a given
situation will generally depend upon the criticality of a situation, and upon
the amount of time available for the test procedures.
Level 1 Diagnostic - This refers to the most comprehensive type of system
diagnostic, which is normally conducted on ship's systems. Extensive automated
diagnostic routines are performed, but a Level 1 diagnostic requires a team of
crew members to physically verify operation of system mechanisms and to system
readings, rather than depending on the automated programs, thereby guarding
against possible malfunctions in self-testing hardware and software. Level 1
diagnostics on major systems can take several hours, and in many cases, the
subject system must be taken off-line for all tests to be performed.
Level 2 Diagnostic - This refers to a comprehensive system diagnostic
protocol, which, like a Level 1, involves extensive automated routines, but
requires crew verification of fewer operational elements. This yields a somewhat
less reliable system analysis, but is a procedure that can be conducted in less
than half the time of the more complex tests.
Level 3 Diagnostic - This protocol is similar to Level 1 and 2
diagnostics but involves crew verification of only key mechanics and systems
readings. Level 3 diagnostics are intended to be performed in ten minutes or
less.
Level 4 Diagnostic - This automated procedure is intended for use
whenever trouble is suspected with a given system. This protocol is similar to
Level 5, but involves more sophisticated batteries of automated diagnostics. For
most systems, Level 4 diagnostics can be performed in less than 30 seconds.
Level 5 Diagnostic - This automated procedure is intended for routine use
to verify system performance. Level 5 diagnostics, which usually require less
than 2.5 seconds, are typically performed on most systems on at least a daily
basis, and are also performed during crisis situations when time and system
resources are carefully managed.
11.0 EMERGENCY
OPERATIONS

11.1 EMERGENCY MEDICAL OPERATIONS
Pursuant to Starfleet
General Policy and Starfleet Medical Emergency Operations, at least 25% of the
officers and crew of the Nova Class are cross-trained to serve as
Emergency Medical Technicians, to serve as triage specialists, medics, and other
emergency medical functions along with non-medical emergency operations in
engineering or tactical departments. This set of policies was established due to
the wide variety of emergencies, both medical and otherwise, that a Federation
Starship could respond to on any given mission.
All of the cargo bays and
some of the science labs (biological sciences) can be easily converted into
emergency treatment wards. Cargo Bays 1 and 2 also provide additional space for
emergency triage centers and recovery overflow. Portable field emitters can be
erected for contagion management.
11.2 EMERGENCY MEDICAL HOLOGRAM
Pursuant to new Medical
Protocols, all Medical Facilities are equipped with holo-emitters for the
emergency usage of the Emergency Medical Hologram System.
Starships of this type carry
the EMH Mark-I, with options to upgrade to new versions as they become
available.
11.3 LIFEBOATS
Pods are located on decks
below Deck 1. Each pod can support a total of eighty-six person-days (meaning,
one person can last eighty-six days, two can last for forty-three, etc.). Two
pods are reserved for the top four officers in the chain of command on the ship,
because they are the last four to leave the ship. These are located on Deck 2.
As the number of experienced Captains dwindles in Starfleet, the notion of a
Captain going down with his ship has been abolished. If the ship is abandoned,
the top four officers in the chain of command will wait until everyone else is
off the ship, opt to arm the auto-Destruct (not always necessary, but there if
needed), and then leave in the two escape pods. The current lifepods are called
ASRVs, or autonomous survival and recovery vehicles. The first group of these
were delivered in 2337 to the last Renaissance class starship, the USS Hokkaido.
In situations when the
base vessel is not near a habitable system, up to four ASRVs may be linked
together in a chain at junction ports to share and extend resources.
11.4 RESCUE AND EVACUATION
OPERATIONS
Rescue and Evacuation
Operations for a Nova Class starship will fall into one of two categories
- abandoning the starship, or rescue and evacuation from a planetary body or
another starship.
Rescue Scenarios
Resources are available
for rescue and evacuation to a Nova Class starship include:
- The
ability to transport 200 persons per hour to the ship via personnel
transporters.
- The
availability of the 2 Type-9 shuttlecraft to be on hot standby for immediate
launch, with all additional shuttlecraft available for launch in an hours
notice. Total transport capabilities of these craft vary due to differing
classifications but an average load of 50 persons can be offloaded per hour
from a standard orbit to an M Class planetary surface.
-
Capacity to support up to 325 evacuees with conversion of the shuttlebay and
cargo bays to emergency living quarters.
-
Ability to convert the Mess Hall to an emergency triage and medical center.
-
Ability to temporarily convert Cargo Bay 1 to type H, K, or L environments,
intended for non-humanoid casualties.
Abandon-Ship Scenarios
Resources available for
abandon-ship scenarios from a Nova Class starship include:
- The
ability to transport 300 persons per hour from the ship via personnel and
emergency transporters.
- The
availability of the 2 Type-9 shuttlecraft to be on hot standby for immediate
launch, with all additional craft available for launch in an hours notice.
Total transport capabilities of these craft vary due to differing
classifications but an average load of 75 persons can be offloaded per hour
from a standard orbit to an M Class planetary surface.
-
Protocols also include the use of Lifeboats. Each Nova Class vessel
carries 24 of the 6-person variants, which measures 5.6 meters tall and 6.2
meters along the edge of the rectangle. Each Lifeboat can survive longer if
they connect together in "Gaggle Mode.”
-
Environmental Suits are available for evacuation directly into a vacuum. In
such a scenario, personnel can evacuate via airlocks, the flight bay, or
through exterior turbolift couplings. Environmental suits are available at all
exterior egress points, along with survival lockers spaced throughout the
habitable portions of the starship. Standard air supply in an EV suit is 4
hours.
11.5 CORE EJECTION
Though rare, starships
occasionally face the horrible concept of a warp core breech. As the primary
power source for a starship, the explosive power of a warpcore far surpasses the
superstructure and structural integrity field strengths and most often ends in
the complete destruction of the starship and anything within a 20km blast
radius.
Modern starships have
been equipped for this possibility and have the capability to eject their
warpcore. The Nova Class has an ejection port on the forward side of the
ventral engineering hull. Magnetic rails inside the channel accelerate the core
once disengaged from the ship and ‘fires’ it as far as 2000 meters away from the
ship. The ship then moves away from the core as fast as possible under impulse
power.
Should the core not go
critical, the Nova Class can recover its warpcore by use of tractor beams
and careful manipulation.
APPENDIX A - VARIANT
DESIGNATIONS

N-LFFG – Light Fast Frigate
APPENDIX B - BASIC TECHNICAL
SPECIFICATIONS

ACCOMMODATION
Officers and Crew: 80
Evacuation Limit: 225
DIMENSIONS
Overall
Length: 180 meters
Overall
Draft: 43 meters
Overall Beam: 34 meters
PERFORMANCE
Full
Impulse: .25c
Cruise Speed: Warp 6
Maximum Velocity Warp 8 (12 hours maximum)
ARMAMENT
Standard -
9 Type X phasers, 2 forward
photon torpedo launchers, 1 aft torpedo launcher
TRANSPORT EQUIPMENT
Shuttlecraft:
Transporters:
-
One personnel
-
One cargo
-
Two emergency
APPENDIX C - DECK LAYOUT

Legend
(P/S) – Port/Starboard
(#) Number
Ex: (2 - 1 P/S) – “Two <object>, 1 Port and 1 Starboard”
============
Deck 1:
Bridge, Captain’s
Ready Room, Conference Room, Senior Officer’s Quarters, and Escape Pods
Deck 2:
VIP Quarters,
Executive Officer’s Office, Junior Officers Quarters, Observation Lounge,
Mess Hall, Transporter Room, Holodecks 1&2, Aft Ventral Cargo Bay, Storage (5),
Main Computer Core, Escape Pods, Primary Impulse Engine (Amidships), and Impulse
Engine Deuterium Surge Tanks
Deck 3:
Sickbay, Primary
Sickbay Support Systems (ICU, Biohazard Support, Surgical Ward, Critical Care,
Null-Gravity Treatment, Isolation Suites, etc.), Chief Medical Officer’s
Office, Counselor’s Office, Security Office/Brig, Armory, Crew
Quarters, Transporter Room 2, Auxiliary Shuttlebay, Escape Pods, Auxiliary
Deflector Control, Torpedo Launching Systems (P/S) Photon Torpedo Magazine, and
Photon Torpedo Loading Mechanism
Deck 4:
Arboretum, Botany Lab,
Geology Lab (Planetary), Geology Lab (Astronomical), Planetary Development Lab,
Chief Science Officer’s Office, Crew Quarters, EPS Node Monitoring, SIF
Systems, Dorsal Main Phaser Emitters (P/S), Aft Saucer Phaser Emitters (P/S),
Aft Ship Phaser Emitters (P/S), Ventral Main Phaser Emitters (P/S), Ventral
Sensor Dome, and WaveRider Shuttlecraft Docking Port
Deck 5:
Main Shuttlebay,
Flight Control, Storage (8), Crew Quarters, Astrophysics Lab, Stellar
Cartography, Photon Torpedo Magazine, and Photon Torpedo Loading Mechanism
Deck 6:
Main Deflector
Control, Operations Office, Crew Quarters, Repair Bay, Deuterium Fuel
Storage, and Multi-Purpose Laboratories (3), Cargo Bays (3)
Deck 7:
Crew Quarters, Main
Engineering, Dilithium Reaction Chamber, Engineering Lab, Chief Engineer’s
Office, Cargo Transporters, Landing Systems Control, and Landing Systems
Maintenance
Deck 8:
Escape Pods,
Anti-Matter Storage Pods, Warp Core Ejection Systems, and Anti-Matter Pod
Ejection Systems, Phaser Emitter, and Tractor Beam Systems. Landing Struts (2 –
1P/S)
APPENDIX D - AUTHOR'S NOTES

One of the most welcome
guest stars in Star Trek: Voyager was the USS Equinox under the command of
Captain Ransom. This small ship, first seen in the Deep Space Nine Technical
Manual as the Defiant-Pathfinder, a concept for what later became the USS
Defiant, was recreated to play the role of a small science vessel taken from the
Alpha Quadrant around the same time as Voyager.
Though small, the ship
seemed quite capable. Its one obvious drawback was its speed, at only Warp 8,
the majority of Starfleet ships we see are considerably faster than it. Which is
fine I guess. When your job is to stop and smell the roses, a high top-speed
isn’t an important consideration.
Wow, that ship is
small!
Yep, she’s tiny! Hardly
bigger than its obvious predecessor; the Oberth Class, the Nova is really
designed for her job. She’s a survey ship and pretty much spends most of its
time getting into the detail of a planet or system or nebula or something. Lots
of dedicated professionals doing a thankless job.
Does it use Bio-Neural
Gelpaks?
Nope. The Nova Class
is a little older than the Intrepid and the Intrepid, supposedly, is one of the
first ships to field this new system. So… no gelpaks.
What happens if they
need to hop down to the surface?
Well they can beam down, silly! Or they can use shuttlecraft. But like her
apparent sister ship, the Intrepid, the Nova Class can land. That isn’t
apparent in the show I don’t believe, but you can see the landing strut hatches
on the hull pretty clearly. Plus she’s a fairly small ship and shouldn’t have
too much trouble landing.
Is there a bunch of
them?
Probably. Detailed scans
take a long time, even in Trek. They just can’t take one swipe with the sensors
and know all there is to know about a world, and even more study must be done on
the ground.
That kind of thing is
best handled by a survey ship rather than one of the larger science vessels
(though of course they can do the same things.).
Chances are, there’s a couple of hundred in service, with maybe a hundred or
less put out every year. But space is a big place, and if Starfleet is to
catalog it all, they need a lot of ships to cover it. The Nova is best designed
for this job.
Awwww… that WaveRider
is cute!
I agree. It’s very cute.
APPENDIX E - CREDITS AND
COPYRIGHT INFORMATION

NOVA-CLASS
SPECIFICATIONS CREATED BY: Kurt Goring
A CALL TO DUTY TECHNICAL SPECIFICATIONS
TEAM:
Project Leader: Steve Mallory
Team Members: Robert Siwiak, Jason Sharp, Robert
Pate, Kurt Goring, Mike Stannard
SOURCES USED:
- Star
Trek: The Next Generation Technical Manual - Rick Sternbach and Michael Okuda
- Star
Trek: Deep Space Nine Technical Manual - Herman Zimmerman, Rick Sternbach and
Doug Drexler
- Star
Trek: First Contact
- The
Art of Star Trek
Copyright 2001-2002 Star Trek: A Call to Duty - Technical
Specifications Team / Advanced Starship Design Bureau (ASDB). Use of these specifications is restricted to the Star Trek:
A Call to Duty (ACTD) Technical Specifications domain at http://techspecs.acalltoduty.com and may only be reproduced
with the express permission of the ASDB Team on sites that clearly serve to provide
information on ACTD, its various ships and stations, or other related topics.
Editing the contents of the information present on this page or reformatting the
way in which it is presented is not permitted without the direct permission of
the ASDB Team. Wherever possible, published sources were consulted to add
to the wealth of knowledge in this document, and in some cases, this text was
reproduced here. Sources used are properly cited in the "Credits and
Copyright Information" appendix. No copyright infringement is intended.
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