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Starship engines, designed to run at insane temperatures, would probably be chunks of junk the very moment the ship is immersed in water.
Well, if you're using the ion engines when you splash down, then sure, yeah, that's going to go all kinds of bang. Then again, if using ion engines in an atmosphere you're going to have all sorts of interesting problems anyway. Most ships would be using repulsors when entering a non-vacuum environment, and those have only a slight energy signiature.
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Even windows might burst, if the vessel ended up in water only moments after atmospheric re-entry.
I've always assumed that shielding technology accounts for thermal stresses incurred during re-entry.
In any case, if theships in Star Wars were generally THAT hot when they landed, would that not at least imply that even when landing on land, you'd have serious concerns?
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Vacuum does not corrode and even air does not have impressive conductivity. Water offers plenty of both.
I have to be nerdy here and observe that in fact water is a near perfect electrical insulator. Its actually the salts in unpure water that are very good at conducting a charge. If you put a PC into a tank of distilled water, it's run just fine. Actually probably better than it did before. Not that this is relevant, the odds of finding even a small pool of distilled water naturally are pretty long.
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why would you want to do so anyway?
This discussion spawned from a conversaion between myself and Karanor concerning an idea he was mulling over about a scout / recon ship.