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==Notable Stargates== | ==Notable Stargates== | ||
* {{inlineref|Stargate 1}}: Perhaps the home stargate near [[Earth]], as ''[[Lyran Queen]]'' makes its 3 week sojourn to the gate, which will deposit them at [[Sutter's World]] in the [[Vega]] system {{BR25|Cruise Ship to the Stars}}. | |||
* {{inlineref|Stargate 4}}: Located "26 minutes" from [[Earth]]. Rogers makes his first return trip to Earth through the Stargate system via this gate {{BR25|Planet of the Slave Girls}}. | * {{inlineref|Stargate 4}}: Located "26 minutes" from [[Earth]]. Rogers makes his first return trip to Earth through the Stargate system via this gate {{BR25|Planet of the Slave Girls}}. | ||
* {{inlineref|Stargate 5}}: Located within the vicinity of [[Vistula]] in the [[Epsilon Ludi]] system {{BR25|Planet of the Slave Girls}}. | * {{inlineref|Stargate 5}}: Located within the vicinity of [[Vistula]] in the [[Epsilon Ludi]] system {{BR25|Planet of the Slave Girls}}. |
Revision as of 00:21, 7 March 2021
A stargate is a means of travel for smaller starships, such as Thunderfighters or other shuttle crafts, in use by the Earth Federation.
William "Buck" Rogers travels through one for his first time during flight training with Colonel Wilma Deering (BR25: "Planet of the Slave Girls").
Notable Stargates
- Stargate 1: Perhaps the home stargate near Earth, as Lyran Queen makes its 3 week sojourn to the gate, which will deposit them at Sutter's World in the Vega system (BR25: "Cruise Ship to the Stars").
- Stargate 4: Located "26 minutes" from Earth. Rogers makes his first return trip to Earth through the Stargate system via this gate (BR25: "Planet of the Slave Girls").
- Stargate 5: Located within the vicinity of Vistula in the Epsilon Ludi system (BR25: "Planet of the Slave Girls").
Operation
The stargate is only visible when in use and consists of an equilateral diamond formed by four points linked by thin energy beams. Once "connected" these beams generate an energy field within its center, through which the ship enters.
Trivia
- Science fiction's usage of the term "star gate" is believed to originate from Andre Norton's 1958 novel Star Gate.
- The functionality of a "space gate" is common in most science fiction. For instance, the jumpgates from Babylon 5 are used similarly as the stargate for smaller crafts, such as fighters and shuttles.
- The term "stargate" is better known as a device centered around the 1994 feature film, Stargate, as well as the spin-off television series, Stargate SG-1.