Elway Theorem Breakthrough — Crusher Required
Plot Beats
The narrative micro-steps within this event
Picard arrives, overhears the discussion, and dedises that the Ansata's use of the technology may require Dr. Crusher's medical expertise.
Who Was There
Characters present in this moment
Excited and driven — a mix of youthful fascination and focused urgency; his curiosity is sharpened by the personal stakes of the larger crisis.
Wesley physically handles the opened Ansata armband, observes data on the monitors, calls up archival files, and excitedly pushes the group toward the Elway Theorem as the explanatory model.
- • establish a plausible mechanism for the armband's function (inter‑dimensional transport)
- • find and present archival evidence (Elway Theorem files) to validate the hypothesis
- • convert technical observation into actionable tracing strategies
- • archival physics can reveal practical solutions to contemporary problems
- • matching field signatures and historical theory is a valid route to explanation
- • a technical solution will materially advance rescue efforts
Gravely concerned and resolute — an impersonal command demeanor that masks personal stakes, escalating the issue from technical curiosity to urgent rescue necessity.
Picard arrives after overhearing the technical exchange, asks pointed questions about traceability, synthesizes Data and Geordi’s findings, and reframes the discovery as having immediate medical implications requiring a doctor.
- • determine whether the phenomenon can be traced and interdicted
- • assess the operational and medical needs implied by the technology
- • translate forensic discovery into actionable command priorities
- • intelligence that suggests human harm requires immediate medical and command response
- • the Enterprise must marshal both technical and personnel resources (including medical) to address threats
- • irrational enemy behavior is still a threat that must be managed strategically
Calm, methodical, and cautionary — emotionally neutral in delivery while conveying moral and practical concern about human cost.
Data inspects and narrates the armband's internals, identifies the subspace field coil, cross-references historical theory, and warns that use of such technology is known to be fatal and irrational.
- • accurately identify the device's physical components and likely operation
- • signal the medical and ethical implications of the technology's use
- • temper speculative leaps with empirical history
- • technical identification must be grounded in established research
- • previously discarded theories (Elway) have documented consequences and risks
- • scientific clarity can inform command decisions and prevent harm
Alert and solution-oriented — measured concern mixed with the determination to find a working technical approach.
Geordi monitors the display, calls the team's attention to a Rutian-detected faint nuclear vibration, connects field data to tracing possibilities, and proposes using an adaptive subspace echogram to track the pattern.
- • corroborate the discovered signature with external telemetry (Rutian team)
- • identify a sensor or method capable of tracing the transport (adaptive subspace echogram)
- • translate forensic evidence into a usable tactical option
- • external sensor data (Rutian) can validate shipboard findings
- • engineering tools and consoles can be adapted to trace unconventional signatures
- • practical detection methods will enable rescue or interdiction
Objects Involved
Significant items in this scene
The Main Engineering pool table functions as the impromptu work surface where the armband is laid open and technicians cluster; it organizes the physical choreography of inspection and allows multiple operators to collaborate over the device.
The adaptive subspace echogram is referenced as the prospective tracing instrument; Geordi suggests using it to lock the armband’s carrier signature because standard sensors would miss an isolated-field coil signature.
The Ansata armband's embedded subspace field coil is physically exposed and inspected; its layered filaments and isolated power source become the key piece of evidence linking the device to Elway's discredited inter‑dimensional transport theory and the faint nuclear vibration readout.
The Processor 451 diagnostic console and bypass interface provides the working interface for pulling archival files and rendering analysis overlays; Wesley uses shipboard computer access to call up the Elway Theorem files while Geordi monitors live telemetry there.
Location Details
Places and their significance in this event
Main Engineering serves as the practical forensic and problem‑solving arena: a noisy, instrumented workshop where technical minds convene, evidence is dissected, and command can rapidly interface with engineering staff, turning a forensic exercise into an operational briefing.
Narrative Connections
How this event relates to others in the story
"Wesley's connection of the nuclear vibrations to the Elway Theorem eventually enables the team to locate the Ansata base, driving the rescue mission."
"Wesley's connection of the nuclear vibrations to the Elway Theorem eventually enables the team to locate the Ansata base, driving the rescue mission."
Key Dialogue
"DATA: A subspace field coil with an isolated power source... curious..."
"WESLEY: Wait a minute... computer, files on... what was it called... We spent an hour on it in my astral physics course last year... folded space transport... (later) What if they're moving inter-dimensionally?"
"PICARD: We may well be dealing with irrational people, Data. Is there a way to trace this...? (after Data explains damage) And it sounds as though they might require the services of... a doctor."