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Bajoran religious texts state that the Pagh Wraiths once resided in the Celestial Temple (the Bajoran wormhole) alongside the Prophets and, like them, are non-corporeal beings. However, they were expelled from the Celestial Temple and banished to the Fire Caves on Bajor. According to ancient Bajoran texts, the Pagh Wraiths were "false Prophets".
A wormhole is also used in this universe to put a probe into the sun (the wormhole is utilized to cool the probe, throwing out solar material fast enough to keep the probe at operating temperatures). In his book Ring, the Xeelee construct a gigantic wormhole into a different universe which they use to escape the onslaught of the Photino birds.
"Eye of the Needle" is the seventh episode of the American science fiction television series Star Trek: Voyager. The screenplay was written by Bill Dial and Jeri Taylor based on a story by Hilary Bader, and it was directed by Winrich Kolbe. In this episode Voyager discovers and explores the nature of a wormhole. [1]
The wormhole can only be traversed by ships traveling at impulse (sub-light speed) velocities. The Bajoran wormhole is discovered in the first episode of Star Trek: Deep Space Nine. It is found to connect the Bajor-B'Hava'el system in the Alpha Quadrant to the Idran system in the Gamma Quadrant, [3] which are seventy thousand light-years apart.
The Voyager crew succeed in stabilizing the wormhole, but the Ferengi manage to steal back their shuttlecraft, which Voyager had confiscated. Their attempts to escape back to Takar end with them being sucked into the wormhole and destabilizing it on both ends, leaving the Ferengi lost in space again.
From 2004 to 2009, characters from Voyager appeared in other Star Trek relaunch novels, as well as the Star Trek: Titan flagship series. Full Circle (2009) and Unworthy (2009), by Kirsten Beyer, served as a soft reset to the continuity of the series by resolving several Voyager -related plots and changes introduced in Star Trek novels published ...
Voyager encounters a distress call and finds a ship with a non-humanoid life form on the verge of dying. They transport the scorpion-like creature to Sickbay but it wraps around B'Elanna Torres, creating a physical and biochemical bond. Doing nothing means Torres will die; separating them risks killing them both.
The wormhole is the home of powerful non-corporeal beings, known as the "Prophets", who are worshiped by the natives of the nearby planet Bajor as gods; the Bajorans consider Benjamin Sisko (Avery Brooks), the human commanding officer of the space station, to be the Prophets' chosen "Emissary". In this episode, Sisko is given a much-appreciated ...