Subject: Some thoughts on that 'fall'.
Author:
Posted on: 2013-11-17 23:01:00 UTC

From the footage after the crash, the craft did get pretty wrecked up - the Doctor appeared to be lying amid debris with the sky above him. The hull had essentially ceased to exist in any recognisable form.

However, the vessel was referred to as a 'gunship', which suggests that it is military in nature. It's not unreasonable to assume that it would have had a lot of armour, and structural redundancy - it may have even had automated emergency systems designed to help out in a crash landing, something like a Star Wars repulsorlift could be used to cushion the impact, but might only kick in at the last second. OK, the sudden deccleration of such a system could do some fairly horrific things to any crew left onboard - but it's not going to be worse than hitting a planet at terminal velocity.

As for the crash itself, the final trajectory appeared to be a straight line. Yeah it was at quite a steep angle, but the craft wasn't plummeting, and it wasn't rolling or spiralling either - that implies that it came down under at least partial control. I don't think it was an unpowered descent. If it did have some kind of emergency landing system fitted, then those two things combined might have been enough to stop it from turning into a relativistic kill vehicle - which seems to be the sort of thing you were expecting from that 'vaporised' comment.

In conclusion, if you do have to be in a crashing spaceship, then being in one designed/built by whoever did that one is not a bad idea. Also, try and sit near the Black Box - after all, if that's the only bit of the craft they expect to recover, that sounds like a pretty good spot to be in :)

And I just have to say that I really like the Doctor's logic about why they should move to the back of the ship - I thought that was a very nice line.

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