Microsingularity

For other uses, see singularity.

A microsingularity was a stellar phenomenon where a black hole had less than one solar mass but still produced a gravity effect. These singularities can be naturally occurring or be generated. Microsingularities have been encountered by the Enterprise (NX-01), the USS Defiant, and the USS Voyager. (ENT episode: "Shuttlepod One", DS9 episode: "Past Tense", VOY episode: "Message in a Bottle")

History[]

In the 2250s decade, microsingularities were considered mythical to Earth science, but Vulcans were open to the possibility that they existed. In November 2151, the Enterprise and a Tesnian starship encountered microsingularities within an asteroid field. (ENT episode: "Shuttlepod One")

In the late 23rd century, scientists on Delta Pegasi I fashioned a star siphon to tap stellar energy as a power source. It didn't work as planned, with the resulting micro-black hole threatening to collapse Delta Pegasi and wipe out all life in the system. (Adventures RPG module: Mission Briefs: Mysteries mission: "The Maelstrom Imperative")

In the 24th century, an artificial microsingularity served as the power source for Romulan starships. Although extremely efficient, once formed, failure of its complex containment field would lead to the ship's destruction. In 2311, the Tomed Incident involved the obliteration of the Romulan flagship IRW Tomed while traveling at warp nine. The released microsingularity while at warp produced a subspace wave that destroyed the USS Agamemnon, the shuttle Liss Riehn, and everything else in the Foxtrot sector. (TLE novel: Serpents Among the Ruins)

In 2371, Takaran researcher Doctor Ja'Benn worked on a project that incorporated a microsingularity as the power source for a quantum torpedo. When detonated, it formed a subspace rupture that prevented a warp bubble from remaining stable. Ja'Brenn discovered that this prototype had actually been stolen from a Romulan research facility. While it was being tested in the Tararan system, three Klingon B'rel-class birds of prey made off with the prototype. (Adventures RPG module: These are the Voyages: Mission Compendium Vol. 1 mission: That Which is Unknown)

In 2372, Tesnians were conducting promising microsingularity research. (DTI novel: Watching the Clock)

First Splinter timeline[]

In 2374, the crew of USS Voyager encountered communications arrays powered by microscopic singularities. The Hirogen had been also been able to do that. (VOY - String Theory novel: Fusion)

Several months later, the crew of USS Voyager destabilized the unnaturally collapsing white dwarf star Blue Eye in the Monorhan system with trilithium to escape from a subspace fold and reduce radiation harmful to those on the planet Monorha. In normal space, the star would have collapsed, but instead it formed an unusual microsingularity that expanded into a rift. (VOY - String Theory novels: Cohesion, Fusion, Evolution)

In 2381, Seven of Nine fired a tachyon pulse at a class-A magnetar, which forced it to collapse into a microsingularity, in order to increase the range of Voyager's subspace receiver. (VOY novel: Children of the Storm)

In 2384, chief engineer Geordi La Forge suggested to Captain Jean-Luc Picard to seed microsingularities to alter the course of the Nexus away from the space of the Holy Order of the Kinshaya; Picard dismissed the idea believing Starfleet would not approve scattering black holes across the sector. (TNG eBook: The Stuff of Dreams)

Other alternate realities[]

In 2366, Mara speculated that an earthquake which destroyed Benecia City could have been caused by a quantum string fragment or a microsingularity. (ST - Myriad Universes - Shattered Light novel: Honor in the Night)

Appendices[]

Connections[]

Stellar classification
By class and type class O blue-violet starclass B blue starclass A blue-white starclass F white star (white dwarf) • class G yellow star (yellow dwarfyellow giant) • class K orange star (orange giant) • class M red star (red dwarfred giantred supergiant) • boson starbrown dwarfgreen starN-type starR-type starS-type starD-type star
By size or makeup black hole/black starcarbon stardwarf star (brown dwarfred dwarfwhite dwarfyellow dwarf) • giant star (blue giantred giantorange giantyellow giant) • Lazarus starmicrostarneutron star (collapsarmagnetarpulsar) • protostarsupergianthypergiantvariable starwhite holeWolf-Rayet star

Appearances and references[]

Appearances[]

References[]

External links[]