1:[2,#B],15:[2,#I],17:[3,#B],26:[1,#I],29:[2,#B]@1A&A officer @2 Abbreviation for archaeology and anthropology specialist, a staff officer aboard the original Starship Enterprise. Lieutenant Carolyn Palamas was the A&A officer when the Enterprise visited planet Pollux IV in 2267. (“Who Mourns for Adonais” [TOS]).
~1: [1, #b], 6: [2, #b], 19: [1, #b]@1A.F. @2 An old aquaintance of Jean-Luc Picard. While Picard was at the Academy, he carved A.F.'s initials into Boothby's prized elm tree on the parade grounds. Picard failed Organic Chemistry because of A.F. (“The Game” [TNG]).
~1:[1,#B],24:[1,#B],40:[5,#I]@1AU @2 Abbreviation for Astronomical Unit,a measure of length equal to the distance from the Earth to the Sun, some 150 million kilometers. The V'Ger cloud was described as being over 82 AUs in diameter, which is pretty darned big. (Star Trek: The Motion Picture).
~1:[2,#B],7:[2,#B]@1Aaron, Admiral @2 (Ray Reinhardt). Stationed at Starfleet Headquarters in San Francisco, Aaron had been taken over by the unknown alien intelligence that infiltrated Starfleet Command in 2364. (“Conspiracy” [TNG]).
~1:[1,#B],4:[1,#B],11:[1,#B],38:[2,#B]@1Abrom @2 (William Wintersole). Zeon member of the underground on planet Ekos fighting against the Nazi oppression in 2268. Abrom, his brother Isak, and other members of the underground aided Kirk and Spock in locating Federation cultural observer John Gill. (“Patterns of Force” [TOS]).
~1:[1,#B],12:[2,#B],22:[1,#B]@1absorbed @2 Term used to describe members of the society on planet Beta III who were controlled by the computer known as Landru. When a person was absorbed, their individual will was stripped and the person was forced to behave in a manner that the computer prescribed as being beneficial to society. (“Return of the Archons” [TOS]).
~1:[3,#B],6:[1,#B],23:[2,#B],46:[9,#B]@1Academy Flight Range @2 Located near Saturn in the Sol System, an area of space reserved for flight exercises by cadets from the Starfleet Academy. An accident at the Academy Flight Range in 2368 took the life of cadet Joshua Albert. (“The First Duty” [TNG]). SEE: Crusher, Wesley; Kolvoord Starburst; Locarno, Cadet First Class Nicholas.
~1:[3,#B],10:[3,#B]@1Academy Range Officer @2 Starfleet officer in charge of the Academy Flight Range, located near Saturn. (“The First Duty” [TNG]).
~1:[2,#B],7:[1,#B],10:[1,#I],14:[1,#B]@1Acamar III @2 Home planet of the Acamarian race. The Enterprise -D met Sovereign Marouk, an Acamarian leader, and her attendants there. (“The Vengeance Factor” [TNG]).
~1:[2,#B],8:[2,#B]@1Acamar System @2 The location of the planet Acamar III. (“The Vengeance Factor” [TNG]).
~1:[1,#B],6:[2,#B],23:[1,#B],99:[1,#B],102:[1,#B],122:[1,#B],148:[1,#B]@1Acamarians @2 Humanoid race from planet Acamar III. The Acamarians had enjoyed peace for the past century, with the exception of Acamar's nomadic Gatherers, who left their homeworld to become interstellar marauders. These races appeared largely human with the exception of a facial cleft in their foreheads and the use of individualized decorative facial tattooing. Acamarian blood is based on an unusual iron and copper composite, making it readily identifiable. Within Acamarian culture, membership in a clan is considered of great social and political importance, and conflicts between the various clans often became violent. One such feud, between the Lornaks and the Tralestas, lasted some three centuries, and ended only after the last Tralesta was dead. The Acamarian government, headed by Soverign Marouk, extended an offer of reconciliation to the renegade Gatherers in 2366. The negotiations, mediated by Jean-Luc Picard, were eventually successful. (“The Vengeance Factor” [TNG]). SEE: Yuta.
~1:[2,#B],8:[1,#B]@1access terminal @2 Systems connector port used aboard Borg ships to allow individual Borg to link to their collective. (“I, Borg” [TNG]).
~1:[2,#B],27:[2,#B],43:[3,#I],46:[2,#BI],48:[4,#I]@1access tunnel @2 Series of passageways traversing Deep Space 9, filled with circuitry and other utilities that may be accessed for repairs. The device responsible for the aphasia virus was located in one of the access tunnels containing the food-replicator circuitry. (“Babel” [DS9]). Similar to the Jefferies tubes used aboard Federation starships.
~1:[1,#B],9:[1,#B],15:[3,#B],21:[1,#I]@1Accolan @2(Dan Mason). Citizen and artist on planet Aldea who would have helped raise Harry Bernard, Jr., child of an Enterprise -D crew member, had Harry and other children remained on Aldea in 2364. (“When the Bough Breaks” [TNG]).
~1:[2,#B],7:[1,#B],13:[1,#B],58:[2,#B],65:[1,#BI],75:[1,#I]@1aceton assimilators @2 Weapon used by the Menthars in their war with the Promellians a thousand years ago. Aceton assimilators could drain power from distant sources (such as an enemy ship), then use that power to generate deadly radiation to kill the ship's crew. The Menthars placed hundreds of thousands of these devices in the asteroid field near Orelious IX, thus trapping the Promellian cruiser Cleponji a millennium ago. The devices remained active and trapped Enterprise -D there in 2366. (“Booby Trap” [TNG]).
~1:[1,#B],31:[1,#B],36:[3,#B],58:[1,#B]@1acetylcholine@2Biochemical substance, a neurotransmitter that promotes the propagation of electrical impulses from one nerve cell to another in carbon-based life. Spock performed an acetylcholine test on a huge spaceborne amoeba creature that destroyed the Gamma 7A System in 2268, although McCoy felt the test was improperly done. (“The Immunity Syndrome” [TOS]). Levels of acetylcholine in the hippocampus can quantify the amount of memory an individual has accumulated. (“All Good Things…” [TNG]).
~1:[1,#B],23:[3,#B]@1Achilles @2 Popular gladiator who fought McCoy and Spock in the televised arena on planet 892-IV in 2267. (“Bread and Circuses” [TOS]). SEE: 892, Planet IV.
~1:[1,#B],12:[3,#B],25:[1,#B]@1actinides @2 Radioactive compounds often found in uranium ore. Actinides in the Ikalian asteroid belt made it difficult for sensors to determine the location of Kriosian rebels in the area in 2367. (“The Mind's Eye” [TNG]).
~1:[1,#B],6:[2,#B],13:[1,#B],39:[9,#I]@1Adam @2 (Charles Napier). Follower of Dr. Sevrin who sought the mythical planet Eden in 2269. The musically inclined Adam died when he ate an acid-saturated fruit on a world he thought was Eden. (“The Way to Eden” [TOS]). Charles Napier also played country-and-western singer Tucker McElroy in The Blues Brothers.
~1:[3,#B],10:[2,#B],24:[3,#B]@1Adams, Dr. Tristan @2 (James Gregory). Assistant director of the Tantalus V penal colony in 2266. Adams seized control of the colony after director Simon Van Gelder became insane from testing a neural neutralizer device. Adams later died from exposure to the unit. (“Dagger of the Mind” [TOS]).
~1:[3,#B],48:[1,#B]@1adaptive interface link @2 Computer connection used to exchange information between two computer systems of totally alien origin. An adaptive interface link was used to download information from an alien space probe of unknown origin to station Deep Space 9's computers on stardate 46925. (“The Forsaken” [DS9]). SEE: Pup.
~1: [2, #b], 4: [1, #b], 40: [12, #i], 54: [4, #i]@1Adele, Aunt @2 Jean-Luc Picard's relative, who taught him a number of home remedies for common ailments. These included ginger tea for the common cold (“Ensign Ro” [TNG]) and steamed milk with nutmeg to treat sleeplessness. (“Cause and Effect” [TNG]). Aunt Adele was also mentioned in “Schisms” (TNG). She was named for Star Trek assistant director Adele Simmons.
~1:[3,#B],8:[3,#B]@1Adelman Neurological Institute @2 Biomedical research facility where Dr. Toby Russell served on staff in 2368. (“Ethics” [TNG]).
~1:[2,#BI],5:[1,#I],23:[1,#I],24:[2,#B],37:[2,#B]@1Adelphi, U.S.S. @2 Federation starship, Ambassador class, Starfleet registry NCC-26849 that conducted the disastrous first contact with the planet Ghorusda. Forty-seven people, including Adelphi captain Darson, were killed in the incident, which later became known as the Ghorusda disaster. (“Tin Man” [TNG]).
~1:[2,#B],6:[1,#I],15:[1,#BI]@1Adelphous IV @2 Destination of the Enterprise -D following its encounter with the Romulan Warbird Devoras in 2367. (“Data's Day” [TNG]).
~1:[1,#B],30:[1,#B],54:[1,#I],62:[1,#B]@1adrenaline @2 Pharmaceutical based on the humanoid hormone epinephrine. Adrenaline was the accepted treatment for radiation illness right after the Atomic Age but was replaced as the preferred treatment after hyronalyn was developed. In 2267, Dr. Leonard McCoy found adrenaline to be the only cure for a radiation-induced hyperaccelerated aging disease that affected several Enterprise crew members. (“The Deadly Years” [TOS]). SEE: polyadrenaline.
~1:[2,#BI],6:[1,#I],21:[1,#B],29:[1,#I],31:[18,#I]@1Agamemnon, U.S.S. @2 Federation starship. The Agamemnon was part of task force three, under Captain Picard's indirect command during an expected Borg invasion of 2369. (“Descent, Part I” [TNG]). The Agamemnon was named for the Greek mythological figure who was commander of the Greek forces during the Trojan War.
~1: [3, #b], 28: [8, #i], 124: [1, #bi], 150: [1, #b], 179: [1, #i], 188: [1, #b], 198: [1, #b]@1Age of Ascension@2Klingon rite of passage, marking a new level of spiritual attainment for a Klingon warrior. The ritual involves a recitation by the ascendee, proclaiming “DaHjaj SuvwI'e' jIH. tIgwIj Sa'angNIS. Iw bIQtIqDaq jIjaH.” (“Today I am a Warrior. I must show you my heart. I travel the river of blood.”) The warrior then strides between two lines of other Klingons, who subject him or her to painstiks while the warrior is expected to express his or her most profound feelings while under this extreme duress. (“The Icarus Factor” [TNG]). The first Rite of Ascension must take place before age 13 so that a Klingon youth can declare his intention to become a warrior. The rite involves testing one's fighting skills with bat'leth and other weapons. When Alexander approached his first age of Ascension in 2370, he was unsure if he wanted to perform the ritual. (“Firstborn” [TNG]). Worf underwent his second Age of Ascension ritual at age 15 in 2355. Ten years later, in 2365, Worf celebrated the anniversary of his Age of Ascension with his Enterprise -D crewmates (“The Icarus Factor” [TNG]). Worf's brother, Kurn, was not told that he was the son of Mogh until Kurn reached his Age of Ascension in 2360. Until that point, Kurn believed he was the son of Lorgh (“Sins of the Father” [TNG]).
~1:[3,#B],5:[1,#B],22:[1,#B]@1Age of Decision. @2 A Talarian rite of passage signaling the age of majority for a Talarian male at 14 years. SEE: Jono. (“Suddenly Human” [TNG]).
~1:[4,#B],54:[2,#B]@1Agents 201 and 347 @2 Humans raised on an unknown alien planet, then returned to Earth in the 1960s with a mission to protect humanity from its own self-destructive nature. Both agents were killed in an automobile accident before they could complete their task, so their mission fell to Supervisor 194, also known as Gary Seven. (“Assignment: Earth” [TOS]).
~1:[1,#B],11:[2,#BI],15:[2,#B],30:[14,#I]@1agonizer @2 Small device worn by each crew member on the I.S.S. Enterprise in the mirror universe. This device was used for punishment and was extremely painful. (“Mirror, Mirror” [TOS]). The Klingons used the same prop for discipline in “Day of the Dove” (TOS).
~1:[2,#B],11:[2,#B],16:[2,#BI]@1agony booth @2 Torture device used to enforce discipline in the mirror universe on board the I.S.S. Enterprise. The mirror Chekov was subjected to the booth after an assassination attempt on Captain Kirk. (“Mirror, Mirror” [TOS]).
~1:[1,#B],7:[1,#B],11:[1,#B],17:[1,#B]@1Ah-Kel @2 (Randy Ogelsby). Humanoid of the Miradorn species. Ah-Kel's twin, Ro-Kel, was killed by the fugitive Croden during a robbery in 2369. Ah-Kel's symbiotic relationship with his twin was severed and he vowed to kill Croden in retaliation. (“Vortex” [DS9]).
~1:[1,#BI],26:[1,#I],34:[1,#B]@1ahn-woon @2 Vulcan weapon made of a single leather strip that could be used as a whip or noose. Spock appeared to strangle Kirk with the ahn-woon at the conclusion of their fight on Vulcan in 2267. (“Amok Time” [TOS]).
~1:[3,#B],20:[1,#I],34:[3,#B],43:[1,#I]@1air police sergeant @2 (Hal Lynch). Security officer of Earth's 20th-century United States Air Force who was beamed aboard the Enterprise in 1969. Lipton apprehended Kirk and Sulu trying to remove data from the Omaha Air Base, but was beamed up to the Enterprise, where he was detained under the watchful eye of Transporter Chief Kyle. (“Tomorrow is Yesterday” [TOS]).
~1:[2,#B],34:[1,#B],36:[5,#I]@1air tram @2 Transit vehicle used in the San Francisco Bay area in the 23rd century. Admiral Kirk rode an air tram to Starfleet Headquarters prior to his meeting with Admiral Nogura regarding the V'Ger threat. (Star Trek: The Motion Picture).
~1:[1,#B]@1airlock @2 Aboard a spaceship or space station, an airlock is a passageway that permits personnel to pass from an area in which an atmosphere is maintained, into an area where no atmosphere, or a different atmosphere, exists. Typically, airlocks are used to exit a vehicle into the vacuum of space. Aboard station Deep Space 9, airlocks are also used as passageways to docked spacecraft. (“Captive Pursuit” [DS9]).
~1:[2,#BI],5:[1,#I],14:[1,#I],34:[1,#B],43:[1,#I],64:[1,#I],70:[3,#B],82:[3,#B],89:[20,#I]@1Ajax, U.S.S. @2 Federation starship, Apollo class, Starfleet registry number NCC-11574. In 2327, the Ajax was Ensign Cortin Zwellers' first assignment after his graduation from Starfleet Academy (“Tapestry” [TNG]). In 2364, Starfleet propulsion specialist Kosinski tested an experimental warp drive upgrade on the Ajax, although it was later discovered that Kosinski's theories were baseless. (“Where No One Has Gone Before.” [TNG]). In 2368, the Ajax served as part of the tachyon detection grid, part of Picard's blockade against Romulan interference during the Klingon civil war. (“Redemption, Part II” [TNG]). Named for two heroes from Greek mythology who fought in the Trojan War, Ajax of Salamis and Ajax of Locris.
~1: [1, #b], 16: [1, #b], 19: [2, #bi]@1Ajur @2 (Karen Landry). Twenty seventh-century Vorgon criminal who traveled backward in time to locate Captain Picard and the Tox Uthat. (“Captain's Holiday” [TNG]).
~1:[3,#B],6:[1,#B],8:[2,#B],12:[2,#B],23:[1,#B]@1Akaar, Leonard James @2 Son of Eleen and Teer Akaar on planet Capella IV, born 2267. Leonard James Akaar was hereditary leader, or teer, of the Ten Tribes on that planet, and was named after Captain James Kirk and Chief Surgeon Leonard McCoy. Akaar's mother, Eleen, ruled as regent during his childhood. (“Friday's Child” [TOS]).
~1:[2,#B],6:[1,#B],15:[2,#B],24:[1,#B],41:[3,#B],48:[1,#B]@1Akaar, Teer @2 (Ben Gage). High teer or leader of the Ten Tribes of planet Capella IV. Akaar was killed in 2267 by rival Maab in a power struggle for leadership of the ten tribes. Akaar was succeeded by his son, Leonard James Akaar, born of his widow Eleen shortly after the elder Akaar's death. (“Friday's Child” [TOS]).
~1:[3,#B],13:[1,#B],15:[1,#B],35:[3,#B]@1Akadar, Temple of @2 Ancient ceremonial temple from which, centuries ago, the brothers Krios and Valt ruled a vast interstellar empire. In 2368, a holodeck re-creation of the temple served as the location of a Ceremony of Reconciliation between the peoples of two star systems that had taken the names of each of the brothers. (“The Perfect Mate” [TNG]).
~1:[2,#BI],5:[1,#I],12:[1,#I],24:[1,#B],29:[3,#B],38:[1,#I],40:[11,#I],53:[19,#I],74:[2,#I],77:[5,#I],82:[1,#B]@1Akagi, U.S.S. @2 Federation starship, Rigel class, Starfleet registry number NCC-62158. The Akagi served in Picard's armada to blockade Romulan supply ships supplying the Duras family forces during the Klingon civil war in 2368. (“Redemption, Part II” [TNG]). The Akagi was named for the Japanese carrier that fought the American warship U.S.S. Hornet in the bitter Battle of Midway in World War II. Episode writer Ron Moore thought it fitting that in Star Trek's future, the Akagi would be serving alongside the Hornet.
~1: [3, #bi], 10: [1, #i], 13: [1, #b]@1Aktuh and Melota @2 A Klingon opera, a favorite of Enterprise -D lieutenant Worf. (“Unification, Part II” [TNG]).
~1:[1,#B],11:[3,#B],28:[1,#B],35:[1,#I]@1Akuta @2 (Keith Andes). Leader of the race that inhabited planet Gamma Trianguli VI. As leader of his people, he wore antennae so he could hear commands from Vaal, their god. Vaal felt that the Enterprise landing party was a threat and instructed Akuta how to kill them. Among his people, Akuta was known as “the eyes of Vaal.” (“The Apple” [TOS]).
~1:[2,#B],4:[2,#B],16:[3,#B]@1Al-Leyan transport @2 Professor Richard Galen had hoped to gain passage on an Al-Leyan transport from Deep Space 4 to Caere as part of his quest in 2369 to learn about the first humanoids to live in our galaxy. (“The Chase” [TNG]).
~1:[1,#B],20:[2,#BI],41:[6,#I]@1Alameda @2 City on planet Earth, location of a 20th-century American naval base near San Francisco. The American aircraft carrier U.S.S. Enterprise was docked there in 1986, and Starfleet officers Chekov and Uhura broke into the facility to obtain high-energy photons. (Star Trek IV: The Voyage Home).
~1: [1, #b], 14: [2, #b], 22: [3, #b]@1Alan-a-Dale @2 (LeVar Burton). In Earth mythology, a minstrel who was a member of Robin Hood's band of outlaws in ancient England. Geordi La Forge was cast in this part by Q during a fantasy crafted for Captain Picard in 2367. Unfortunately, Geordi's musical skills were not quite up to the part. (“QPid” [TNG]).
~1:[1,#B],11:[1,#I],23:[2,#B]@1Alans @2 (Whitney Rydbeck). Specialist in volcanology and geomechanics aboard the Enterprise -D. Alans assisted in the geological survey of planets in the Selcundi Drema sector in 2365. (“Pen Pals” [TNG]).
~1:[2,#B],7:[1,#I]@1Alawanir Nebula @2 Nebula investigated by the Enterprise -D in 2369. (“Rightful Heir” [TNG]).
~1:[2,#BI],6:[1,#B],21:[1,#B]@1Alba Ra @2 A contemporary (24th-century) Talarian music form. Electronic, discordant and very loud, it was a favorite listening pleasure of Jono, although Jean-Luc Picard thought it less than wonderful. (“Suddenly Human” [TNG]).
~1: [3, #b], 26: [1, #b]@1Albeni meditation crystal @2 A colorless sphere about 10 cm in diameter, producing a warm glow and a soft hum. Used as an aid to meditation. Riker presented an Albeni meditation crystal to Beata of planet Angel One. (“Angel One” [TNG]).
~1:[2,#B],11:[2,#B],39:[2,#B],51:[2,#B]@1Albert, Joshua @2 Starfleet Academy cadet and part of the Academy's Nova Squadron, killed in a flight accident in 2368. Although preliminary testimony pointed to pilot error on the part of Albert as the cause of his death, Cadet Wesley Crusher later testified that the squadron was attempting to perform a Kolvoord Starburst at the time of the accident. The attempt at the prohibited maneuver was blamed for the cadet's death. (“The First Duty” [TNG]).
~1:[3,#B],12:[2,#B]@1Albert, Lieutenant Commander @2 (Ed Lauter). Starfleet officer and father of Cadet Joshua Albert. Commander Albert was present at the inquiry into his son's death in 2368. (“The First Duty” [TNG]).
~1:[1,#B],7:[1,#B]@1Alcyones @2 Race that destroyed the last Tarellian plague vessel in 2358. (“Haven” [TNG]).
~1:[1,#BI],3:[1,#I],8:[2,#B],11:[1,#I],13:[2,#B]@1Aldara @2 Cardassian Galor -class warship commanded by Gul Danar. The Aldara pursued Tahna Los after the Bajoran terrorist stole an antimatter converter from the Cardassians in 2369. (“Past Prologue” [DS9]).
~1:[1,#B],38:[1,#B],66:[3,#B],87:[1,#B],118:[1,#I]@1Aldea @2 Planet, long thought to be mere legend. Aldea was held to be a peaceful, advanced world where technology provided for every citizen to pursue intellectual and artistic endeavors. The legends had a basis in truth. The Aldeans had indeed achieved an idyllic existence, then used a powerful cloaking device to mask their planet from potential intruders. Over the centuries, the planet, located in the Epsilon Mynos System, faded into the obscurity of legend. Unfortunately, the planet's cloaking and shielding systems caused damage to the planet's ozone layer, resulting in widespread radiation poisoning to the Aldeans. Eventually, the Aldeans became sterile, unable to bear children. Finally, in the year 2364, they attempted to kidnap children from the Enterprise -D crew in a desperate bid to perpetuate their society. After the attempt failed, starship personnel assisted the Aldeans in dismantling their shielding systems so that the planet's ozone layer would have a chance to return to normal. (“When the Bough Breaks” [TNG]).
~1:[1,#B],6:[1,#B],26:[1,#B]@1Aldeans @2 Humanoid inhabitants of planet Aldea. The Aldeans suffered long-term chromosomal damage from radiation exposure when their cloaking device caused a breakdown in the planet's ozone layer. (“When the Bough Breaks” [TNG]).
~
~1:[2,#B],8:[1,#B],24:[1,#I]@1Aldebaran serpent @2 A three-headed reptile from Aldeberan. Q appeared briefly in the form of such an animal during his second visit to the Enterprise -D. (“Hide and “Q” [TNG]).
~1:[2,#B],17:[1,#I],40:[55,#I]@1Aldebaran whiskey @2 A green-colored alcoholic beverage of considerable potency. Although most intoxicating beverages served aboard the Enterprise -D used synthehol instead of alcohol, Picard gave Guinan a bottle of Aldebaran whiskey that she kept behind the bar. (“Relics” [TNG]). Data served some Aldebaran whiskey to Scotty after Scotty expressed displeasure with synthehol-based scotch. Data must have been unfamiliar with Aldebaran whiskey, because he described the drink by simply noting that “it is green,” an homage by episode writer Ron Moore to Scotty's delivery of (nearly) the same line in “By Any Other Name” (TOS).
~1:[1,#B],4:[2,#B],8:[1,#I],23:[19,#I]@1Aldebaron @2 Psychologist Dr. Elizabeth Dehner joined the Enterprise crew at the Aldebaron colony in 2265. (“Where No Man Has Gone Before” [TOS]). Note that both the spelling and the pronounciation were different from Aldebaran, which was referred to in other episodes.
~1:[2,#B],11:[1,#I],18:[2,#B]@1Aldorian ale @2 Beverage served in the Ten-Forward Lounge of the Enterprise -D at the request of the Harodian miners who were guests aboard the ship in 2368. (“The Perfect Mate” [TNG]).
~1:[1,#B],10:[1,#B],32:[1,#B],59:[1,#I]@1Alexander @2(Platonian) (Michael Dunn). Platonian citizen who, unlike other Platonians, lacked telekinetic powers. Alexander had a pituitary hormone deficiency, resulting in his short stature and his inability to absorb the chemical kironide from his planet's native food. Because he had no telekinetic powers, Alexander was forced to act as court buffoon to his fellow Platonians. Alexander befriended the Enterprise landing party in 2268 and eventually left with them. (“Plato's Stepchildren” [TOS]).
~1:[1,#B],6:[2,#B]@1Alexander @2(son of Worf) SEE: Rozhenko, Alexander.
~1:[2,#B]@1Alfa 117 @2 Class-M planet, the site of a geological survey mission during which a transporter malfunction created a partial duplicate of Captain Kirk in 2266. The transporter malfunction also stranded remaining members of the landing party on the planet's surface, threatening their survival when nighttime temperatures dropped to 120 degrees below zero. The survey team survived in part by using their phasers to heat rocks, which then served to warm team personnel. (“The Enemy Within” [TOS]).
~1:[1,#B],3:[3,#B]@1Algeron @2 SEE: Treaty of Algeron.
~1:[3,#BI],21:[2,#B],24:[1,#B],28:[3,#B],33:[1,#I]@1Alice in Wonderland @2 Old Earth children's story written by 19th-century English author Lewis Carroll. Two characters from this book, the White Rabbit and Alice, appeared on the amusement park planet during an Enterprise landing party's visit in 2267. (“Shore Leave” [TOS]).
~1:[2,#B],15:[1,#B],22:[2,#B]@1Alice series @2(#1-250: Alyce Andrece. #251-500: Rhae Andrece) One of the many models of androids who populated the planet controlled by Harry Mudd in 2267. This brunette model was a particular favorite of Mudd's, who had 500 Alices made. (“I, Mudd” [TOS]).
~1:[1,#B],7:[3,#BI],14:[3,#B]@1Alice @2 Character from the children's story, Alice in Wonderland. Alice appeared on the amusement park planet after Dr. McCoy, on a landing party there in 2267, mentioned the world looked like something out of that fanciful book. (“Shore Leave” [TOS]).
~1:[3,#B],76:[2,#B]@1Alkar, Ambassador Ves @2(Chip Lucia) Federation mediator. A Lumerian, Alkar had empathic powers, and used those abilities to surreptitiously transfer his negative emotions into another person, giving him the emotional strength to handle even the most difficult disputes. These “receptacles” (as Alkar described them) suffered from greatly accelerated aging and severe personality disorders, eventually dying. Alkar continued this practice for many years before Dr. Beverly Crusher discovered it during an investigation into the death of Sev Maylor in 2369. Maylor had been a victim of Alkar's abuse. He was in the process of subjecting Deanna Troi to the same treatment when he died after being cut off from access to her mind. (“Man of the People” [TNG]).
~1:[1,#B],5:[1,#B],12:[1,#B],17:[1,#B],33:[1,#B]@1allamaraine @2 Word shouted by Falow each time the players in the Chula game moved to another shap, or level. Also the basis of a nursery rhyme recited by a little girl named Chandra as part of the game. (“Move Along Home” [DS9]).
~1:[1,#B],20:[1,#B],22:[1,#B],25:[2,#B],34:[1,#B]@1allasomorph @2 Shape-shifting species of intelligent life with the power to alter its molecular structure into that of other life-forms. Salia and Anya of planet Daled IV were both allasomorphs. (“The Dauphin” [TNG]). SEE: shape-shifter.
~1:[3,#B],11:[1,#I],21:[2,#B],47:[2,#B]@1Allenby, Ensign Tess @2(Mary Kohnert) Flight Control officer aboard the Enterprise -D, she piloted the ship during the mission at Gamelan V in 2367 (“Final Mission” [TNG]). Allenby was at the conn when the ship encountered a school of two-dimensional creatures while en route to planet T'lli Beta (“The Loss” [TNG]).
~
~1:[3,#B],17:[1,#B],33:[2,#B]@1Alpha Carinae II @2 Class-M planet with two major land masses used in 2268 to test the M-5 computer's performance in conducting routine planetary contact and survey operations. (“The Ultimate Computer” [TOS]). SEE: Canopus Planet.
~1:[3,#B],8:[1,#B]@1Alpha Carinae V @2 Planet origin of the Drella, a creature that derives its energy from the emotion of love. (“Wolf in the Fold” [TOS]).
~1:[2,#B],27:[1,#B],58:[2,#B]@1Alpha Centauri @2 One of the nearest stars to Earth's Solar system, some 4.3 light-years from Sol. In Earth's past, Kirk told United States Air Force officer Fellini that he was a little green man from Alpha Centauri and that it was a beautiful place to visit (“Tomorrow Is Yesterday” [TOS]). Alpha Centauri was home to noted scientist Zefram Cochrane, who invented warp drive in the 21st century (“Metamorphosis” [TOS]).