Rescue and evacuation operations generally fall into two categories, rescue and evacuation to the ship, and evacuation
from the ship. The former will generally involve transport from another ship or a planetary surface. The latter will generally
involve removal of the ship’s company to another ship, a planetary surface, or into space.
Rescue
Scenarios
Resources available for rescue and evacuation to the ship include:
·
Availability to transport up to 1,000
persons per hour to the ship via personnel transporters.
·
Availability of five personnel shuttlecraft
on immediate standby and up to six addition shuttles available on twelve-hour notice. Additional shuttle vehicles may be available
depending on other mission requirements and maintenance status. Total transport capacity of these vehicles varies with range
and other factors, but average 250 persons per hour from Class M planetary to standard orbit.
·
Capacity to support up to 15,000 evacuees
with conversion of shuttlebays and cargo bays to emergency living accommodations.
·
Ability to convert secondary shuttlebays
and Holodeck areas to emergency medical triage and treatment centers. Cross-training of sufficient starship personnel to handle
such situations.
·
Ability for short-term conversion of
Shuttlebay 3 to Class H, K, or L environmental conditions.
Abandon-Ship
Scenarios
Resources available for abandon-ship scenarios
include:
·
Ability to transport up to 1,850 persons
per hour from the ship via personnel transporter, including the use of emergency beam-out-only transporters.
·
Availability of five personnel shuttlecraft
on immediate standby and up to six additional shuttles available on twelve-hour notice. Additional shuttle vehicles may be
available depending on other mission requirements and maintenance status. Total transport capacity of these vehicles varies
with range and other factors, but average 250 persons per hour from standard orbit to a Class M planetary surface.
·
Abandon-ship protocols include the use
of ASRV (autonomous survival and recovery vehicle) lifeboats, which provide free space survival accommodations for up to a
total of 1,400 individuals for up to fourteen days. A total of four hundred ASRV’s are available.
·
In a lesser emergency in either the Saucer
Module or the Stardrive Section, the saucer separation maneuver is an option, with evacuation of the ship’s company
to whichever section is not affected by the crisis. Evacuation protocols include options to leave behind a team of engineering
personnel or other specialists who will attempt to deal with the emergency situation.
·
Environmental suits are available for
evacuation into the space environment. In such scenarios, personnel may exit through any of the exterior airlock, through
the shuttlebays, or through the exterior turbolift couplings (assuming that the turbolift system has been disabled). Environmental
suits are available in storage lockers located in corridor storage modules located throughout the habitable volume of the
spacecraft.
·
Many exterior windows are also equipped
with emergency release mechanisms that will permit direct exterior access. These emergency release mechanisms, located near
the base of most windows, are enabled only in the event of atmospheric pressure loss, power loss, certain Red Alert scenarios,
an only if personnel with that contiguous compartment are protected with environmental suits.