Valamelyik Star Trek sorozatban, filmben vagy más médiában elhagyjuk valaha is a Tejútrendszert?
Androméda
In the 1968 Star Trek episode "By Any Other Name", the starship Enterprise is hijacked by Kelvans, aliens from an empire spanning the Andromeda Galaxy; their home galaxy was approaching an uninhabitable state and thus they aimed to conquer our own. In another episode, I, Mudd, the lead android says their creators were humanoids from "Andromeda".
In Gene Roddenberry's Andromeda, the Systems Commonwealth had territory in the Andromeda Galaxy, the Triangulum Galaxy and the Milky Way.
Doctor Who episodes (precise usage of "Andromeda" not always certain):
Mission to the Unknown — The ruler of Earth's solar system mentions that he has attended an intergalactic conference in Andromeda.
The Ark in Space — Star Pioneers from Earth reached Andromeda where they fought a war with the Wirrn.
Castrovalva — The planet Castrovalva is in the "Phylox series" of Andromeda.
The Pirate Planet — Mentions "Andromedan Bloodstones".
The Mysterious Planet — Sabalom Glitz and the thieves who stole Matrix secrets from the Time Lords come from Andromeda.
Evolution (novel) — The Doctor takes a group of humans who have mutated into mermaids to live on a water planet in the Andromeda Galaxy.
Monsters and Villains (reference) — The Face of Boe was around when the stars of the Andromeda Galaxy were still dust.
In "District 9" the "prawns" are from the Andromeda Galaxy.
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Nagy Magellán köd
The Doctor Who story The Ribos Operation is described as being set "three light centuries" from "the Magellanic cloud".
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Kis Magellán köd
In two Star Trek books from Pocket Books - The Lost Era: The Sundered and Titan: The Red King, the Small Magellanic Cloud is home to the Neyel, an offshoot of humanity who dominated several species native to the Cloud.
In the Star Fleet Universe, the Small Magellanic Cloud (referred to in that setting as the Lesser Magellanic Cloud) is home to a number of starfaring empires; such as the Baduvai Imperium, the Eneen Protectorates and the Maghadim Hives. All of these empires were conquered by the Andromedans, who then used the Cloud as a jumping off point into the Milky Way. The Cloud was eventually liberated from Andromedan rule in Operation Unity; a coalition of task forces sent by the Federation, Klingons and other Alpha Octant powers.
In Dan Simmons' Hyperion series, the planet Earth is thought swallowed up by a black hole but is actually transported to somewhere within the Lesser Magellanic Cloud.
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M33 ('Triangulum Galaxy')
In the fictional Star Trek universe, the Triangulum Galaxy is where the USS Enterprise-D is warped to after a being known as The Traveler uses his knowledge to influence the ship's warp drive. M33 is said to be approximately 2.7 million light years away from the United Federation of Planets territories, or about three hundred years' travel time for the Federation's most advanced vessels. The galaxy was first encountered in the Star Trek: The Next Generation episode "Where No One Has Gone Before".
In the Star Fleet Universe, the Triangulum Galaxy was once dominated by a now-defunct precursor empire; the civil war, which tore the Old Empire asunder, left two major successor states (the loyalist Imperium and the rebel Frigian Kingdom) picking up the pieces. Another elder species, the Helgardians, appeared in M33 at the same time; in the modern era, an array of younger powers (such as the Mallaran Empire) would emerge on the back of Helgardian-traded warp technology.
The second season finale of seaQuest DSV featured the seaQuest being transported to the planet Hyperion, over eleven million light years away from Earth in the Triangulum Galaxy.
On Gene Roddenberry's Andromeda the Systems Commonwealth had territory in the Triangulum Galaxy in addition to the Andromeda and Milky Way Galaxies. The new homeworld of which, Tarazed, was located in this Galaxy.
The promotional posters for the movie E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial give the phrase "three million lightyears from home", leading many to believe that the title character hails from M33. Furthermore, the Easter egg of E.T.'s race appearing in Star Wars: Episode I – The Phantom Menace have many Star Wars fans pointing to M33 as the "galaxy far, far away".
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Pegasus Galaxy
The Pegasus Dwarf Irregular Galaxy is the "Pegasus Galaxy" in which the television series Stargate Atlantis takes place.
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M81
In the fictional Star Fleet Universe, M81 is the home galaxy for a number of star-faring species, including the Tholians (who conquered that galaxy and ruled it for many centuries), the Nebuline (one of the Tholians' former enemies, whose remaining nebula-bound colonies laid the groundwork for M81 piracy. ) and the Seltorians (the last of a series of enforcer species for the Tholians; their Revolt virtually exterminated the Tholians as a people, and their subsequent Tribunal fleets pursued exile Tholians to other galaxies, such as the Milky Way )[5] and the Bolosco (some of whom established themselves in the Omega Octant of the Milky Way).
M81 is the galaxy where Destiny is headed, as of episode 16 in the TV series Stargate Universe
még több itt:
A Star Trekben érkeznek az Androméda galaxisból lények hozzánk. Természetesen azok is követik az általános szabályt: az univerzum minden intelligens élőlénye ugyanúgy néz ki, csak máshol vannak a fejükön kinövések.
Érdekesség: mind a Star Warsban, mind a Star Trekben valami furcsaság van a galaxisunk körül, ami alapvetően megakadályozz a agalaxisok közötti utazást. Igen, a star trekben is, az előbb elmondottak ellenére is lsd: [link]
Star Warsban pedig: [link]
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