(Q54807360)

English

Tower Of Babel

book by Christopher L. Bennett

Statements

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March 2014
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Tower Of Babel (English)
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Christopher L. Bennett | Memory Beta, non-canon Star Trek Wiki | Fandom (English)
Star Trek bibliography
Christopher L. Bennett
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25 March 2014
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Elizabeth Cutler | Memory Beta, non-canon Star Trek Wiki | Fandom (English)
Appearances and references
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Devna | Memory Beta, non-canon Star Trek Wiki | Fandom (English)
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Takashi Kimura | Memory Beta, non-canon Star Trek Wiki | Fandom (English)
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Aranthanien ch'Revash | Memory Beta, non-canon Star Trek Wiki | Fandom (English)
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Pedro Ortega | Memory Beta, non-canon Star Trek Wiki | Fandom (English)
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Tobin Dax | Memory Beta, non-canon Star Trek Wiki | Fandom (English)
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ENT: ROTF: Tower of Babel: Passes. More T’Pol/Sato/Cutler; T’Pol debates with Boomer leader Freya Stark; Sedra Hemnask and T’Rama discuss their careers (with Archer participating); etc. (English)
12 July 2020
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While Star Trek’s Rigel has traditionally been assumed to be the blue supergiant star of that name in the constellation Orion, its depiction in Enterprise: “Broken Bow” as a nearer, less familiar system led to its reinterpretation as “Beta Rigel” in Star Trek Star Charts by Geoffrey Mandel, and the StarMap site at whitten.org/starmap identified Mandel’s Beta Rigel with the real star Tau-3 Eridani. (English)
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Memory Alpha, the Star Trek Wiki, identifies Rigel V as their homeworld, perhaps by the process of elimination. (English)
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The 1980 Star Trek Maps and Star Charts both interpreted Rigel VIII as a ringed Jovian, implicitly the one seen in the sky of the “Cage” matte painting. I have followed this precedent but made it Rigel IX instead. (English)
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The cabarets of Rigel II were established in The Original Series: “Shore Leave” by Theodore Sturgeon. Its seedy reputation and criminal ties were suggested by The Lost Era: Catalyst of Sorrows by Margaret Wander Bonanno and IDW Comics’s Alien Spotlight: Orions by Scott and David Tipton and Elena Casagrande. (English)
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Rigel VII and the Kalar are from TOS: “The Cage” by Gene Roddenberry. My depiction of them is heavily influenced by Marvel Comics’s Star Trek: Early Voyages #3, “Our Dearest Blood” by Ian Edgington, Dan Abnett, and Patrick Zircher. The giant cratered world seen in Rigel VII’s sky in the famous Albert Whitlock matte painting from “The Cage” has been interpreted as Rigel VI in fan sources, but due to the DS9 Technical Manual reference, I made it Rigel VIII instead. (English)
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The Trojan asteroids of Rigel I are loosely inspired by the Rigel asteroid belt depicted in Worlds of the Federation by Shane Johnson and in Star Charts, but reinterpreted to fit our modern knowledge of the abundance of hot Jovians orbiting close to their stars. (English)
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