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Operations

Posted Feb. 25, 2020, 9:57 p.m. by Lieutenant Commander Aaron Foley (Executive Officer) (Steve Johnson)

Posted by Gamemaster Wombat (GM) in Operations

Posted by Lieutenant Commander Aaron Foley (Executive Officer) in Operations

Posted by Gamemaster Wombat (GM) in Operations
Posted by… suppressed (2) by the Post Ghost! 👻
Aaron made his way quickly over to the center table in Ops. They had enough data to go over, so he figured he was going to need the space to lay it out.

Bringing up the data that they had started to load into the computer, Aaron started another quick analysis to confirm Lt Knights findings. While the computer ran that analysis, he started looking at the external sensors. Perhaps he could find this mystery particle the Lieutenant was talking about.

LtCmdr Foley - XO

Aaron sat back in the chair while he watched the computer parse through the data. Hopefully it wouldn’t take to long before they got some sort of information back. Because they had to figure out what was causing these viewings.

LtCmdr Foley - XO

The computer showed that whatever was going on it was more likely that these weren’t ghosts that these were the edges of another time and space pushing against this reality. Was the Magellan pushing back? Perhaps the vessel that had exploded saw a brief flash of the briefing room? No further information could be extrapolated from the data set provided.

GM Wombat

Aaron pondered the data that came back in. He was wondering if the apparitions had been another time or reality pushing into their current space. Almost like an echo. But that still didn’t explain where they were coming from.

“Computer, run a scan for any exotic particles. And while you are at it, has there been any variations outside of normal tolerances within the internal chronometers?”

It was a long shot, but perhaps if what they were seeing was an echo from another time, maybe it was having an effect on the internal clocks.

LtCmdr Foley - XO

The computer reported back that some of the internal clocks would desync randomly, but never by more than a few nanoseconds and would be quickly recovered. While problematic it was never enough, or so far out of tolerance to cause a critical system failure or to cause an engineering alarm to sound.

GM Wombat

But it was enough for Aaron to take a second look at them. Even in sophisticated systems, things could get out of sync, the whole reason why the systems did routine checks to make sure everything stayed in sync. But this looked to be way more then normal.

“Computer, correlate desync’s in station clocks to timing and location of known sightings.”

LtCmdr Foley - XO


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