The Bajoran wormhole was the only stable wormhole known to exist in the Milky Way Galaxy. It was the home of extra-dimensional beings who were worshiped by the Bajorans as gods, known as the Prophets. Before the wormhole was discovered by Commander Benjamin Sisko and Lieutenant Jadzia Dax in 2369, it was considered to be a myth. (DS9: "Emissary")
Names[]
The Bajoran wormhole was referred to as the Celestial Temple in Bajoran religious context. Kor, the legendary Klingon Dahar Master, once called the wormhole the "Eye of Destiny". In the Gamma Quadrant, the wormhole was known as "the anomaly" by the Jem'Hadar, and to the Skrreea, according to their mythology, it was the Eye of the Universe. The wormhole was known to the Changelings as the "passageway". (DS9: "Emissary", "Sanctuary", "The Jem'Hadar", "The Search, Part II", "The Sword of Kahless")
Astronomical data[]
The Bajoran wormhole connected two points in the Milky Way Galaxy together which were normally almost ninety thousand light years apart. (DS9: "Captive Pursuit") One terminus was located in the Alpha Quadrant, in the Denorios belt of the Bajoran system. The other terminus was located in deep space in the Gamma Quadrant, 4.7234 light years away from the Idran system. (DS9: "Emissary") For the fastest Federation starship in 2369, it would have taken sixty-seven years of non-stop voyage at maximum warp to cross the distance, but through the wormhole the passage was nearly instantaneous. (DS9: "Captive Pursuit", "Battle Lines")
Because it was stable, the Bajoran wormhole did not have any of the usual resonance waves found in other wormholes. (DS9: "Emissary") It was theorized by Starfleet that the wormhole was formed by verterons, particles that were self-sustaining in nature. (DS9: "In the Hands of the Prophets") Highly elevated levels of neutrinos were also commonly detected prior to the appearance of the wormhole's event horizon, and as a vessel traversed the passage. It was believed that verteron nodes inside the wormhole played a large part in keeping the wormhole stable. (DS9: "In the Hands of the Prophets", "Captive Pursuit"; VOY: "Child's Play")
A chart appearing in Keiko O'Brien's classroom contained a schematic describing the Bajoran wormhole. The graphic itself was titled "A Tunnel In The Sky: New boon for interstellar commerce". The graphic was labeled with several technical terms that mapped the course of the wormhole: Gamma Quadrant, FTR pipeline, F1, B3, negative CTL region, ring singularity, positive CTL region, GBF membrane, point singularity, and Alpha Quadrant. (An additional note stated "subspace distortion in millicochranes".)
It defined the phenomenon as:
- The Bajoran Wormhole
A Wormhole is a tunnel through the structure of space. It is a subspace shortcut between the Bajoran star system and a point in the distant Gamma quadrant of the Galaxy, near the Idran system. This wormhole was constructed by an alien intelligence. Most wormholes are either naturally occurring or the result of dangerous warp drive malfunctions. Such wormholes tend to oscillate wildly across time and space, thus making them useless for normal interstellar commerce.
To the right of the diagram were a number of vocabulary words: superluminal, space warp, wormhole, singularity, Hawking, Stephen, event horizon, Schwarzschild, Einstein-Rosen, Kerr Newman, negative space, millicochrane, warp factor, positive CTL, negative CTL, Kerr object, Godel Universe, sync shift, and time dilation. (DS9: "In the Hands of the Prophets")
History[]
Bajoran historical records indicate that the wormhole had most likely been in existence for at least the past ten thousand years by the late 24th century. The nine Orbs which had appeared on or near Bajor in that time, and which were revered as active links between the Bajoran people and the Prophets, were thought to have come from the wormhole. There were also several unexplained incidents over the centuries that were later attributed to the wormhole after its discovery. In the 22nd century, at least two Bajorans encountered the wormhole: Kai Taluno, whose ship was disabled inside the Denorios belt for several days and reported that "the heavens opened up and nearly swallowed the ship"; and Akorem Laan, whose lightship was damaged in an ion storm, drifted into the Denorios belt, and was then swallowed by the wormhole, where it, and Akorem, stayed with the Prophets until 2372.
Due to the Denorios belt being generally avoided by interplanetary traffic, the wormhole remained undiscovered until 2369, shortly after the end of the Cardassian Occupation of Bajor. When Starfleet took over the operation of the space station Terok Nor in orbit of Bajor, Commander Benjamin Sisko and his science officer Lieutenant Jadzia Dax investigated the many reported anomalies in the belt aboard the USS Rio Grande, and became the official discoverers of the wormhole. Shortly thereafter, the station, renamed Deep Space 9, was relocated to a position near the terminus of the wormhole. (DS9: "Emissary", "Accession")
Keiko O'Brien's classroom aboard Deep Space 9 in 2369 featured a wall chart with an image of the Bajoran wormhole beside other Federation starships. She discussed the history and scientific roots of the wormhole in her lessons, though in a secular fashion, which angered some of the Bajoran devout. (DS9: "The Nagus", "In the Hands of the Prophets")
On one occasion, the wormhole transported a runabout and two crew members to a parallel universe in 2370. This was due to a plasma injector leak which caused the runabout to enter the wormhole with an only partially-collapsed warp field. The two crew members, Major Kira Nerys and Doctor Julian Bashir, were later able to return to their own universe by recreating the accident and returning through the wormhole. (DS9: "Crossover")
The wormhole had an enormous impact on interstellar politics in the Alpha Quadrant. In the first two years, many races eagerly sent explorers and freighters through the wormhole to open relations with new trading partners, and to establish new colonies. However, the wormhole also brought the powers of the Alpha Quadrant into contact with the Dominion, a powerful government that controlled a large swath of territory in the Gamma Quadrant. (DS9: "The Jem'Hadar")
In 2371, Starfleet initiated a joint scientific project with the Bajoran and Cardassian governments to establish a trans-wormhole subspace communications relay, to make it possible for ships in the Gamma Quadrant to contact home, as well as to provide early warning of any Dominion attack. The mission was complicated by a warning from Bajoran Vedek Yarka, who cited Trakor's Third Prophecy, about the potential destruction of the Celestial Temple. This prophecy was unexpectedly validated soon after with the approach of a previously-unknown, long-period comet. This comet was infused with silithium, which had the potential to permanently destabilize the wormhole if it interacted with the verteron particles in the passage. Unable to alter the comet's trajectory, a shuttlepod from the USS Defiant used a deflector shield to prevent the comet's material from contaminating the wormhole. During the transit, trace amounts of silithium inadvertently leaked through the shields, however, the small amounts did not destabilize the wormhole, but instead created a subspace filament inside the wormhole that allowed normal communication between the quadrants. (DS9: "Destiny")
In 2373, when a Dominion invasion became inevitable, Starfleet ordered the entrance to the wormhole be collapsed. Doctor Lenara Kahn of the Trill Science Ministry had devised a means, using a phase-conjugate graviton beam, to seal the wormhole without causing damage to it or harming the Prophets. Deep Space 9 was able to rig the phase-conjugate beam by remodulating the station's deflector grid frequencies and projecting it through its graviton emitters. Unfortunately, when the plan was executed, it was discovered that the emitters had been sabotaged and, as a result, the phase-conjugate graviton beam had the exact opposite effect on the wormhole, and rendered the wormhole's spatial matrix even more stable than before, so stable, in fact, that not even trilithium explosives could destroy the wormhole. Thus, Starfleet was unable to prevent a series of Dominion fleets from entering the Alpha Quadrant. (DS9: "In Purgatory's Shadow")
A few months later, Starfleet was forced to blockade the wormhole with self-replicating mines in order to prevent the growing Dominion threat to the Alpha Quadrant. Deep Space 9 was subsequently lost to the Dominion in the opening battle of the Dominion War, but the minefield was successfully planted, preventing further Dominion ships from traversing the wormhole. The minefield was eventually destroyed while the Federation attempted to retake the station. The Dominion fleet that was passing through the wormhole at the time was destroyed by the Prophets however, since the Prophets' Emissary chose to die trying to stop the Dominion fleet rather than heed their will. After this event, no further traffic passed through the wormhole until the end of the war. (DS9: "Call to Arms", "Favor the Bold")
Ronald D. Moore commented that, after the invading Dominion fleet was destroyed, "the Prophets probably would stop any Dominion ship from coming through the wormhole." (AOL chat, 1997)
With the wormhole considered impassable, the Dominion introduced a new breed of Jem'Hadar, the Alphas, in 2374. (DS9: "One Little Ship")
In a possible deleted or unfilmed scene from the episode, Nog stated his opinion that the introduction of the Alphas could mean the Dominion would not need to bring reinforcements through the wormhole.
The wormhole was apparently destroyed in late 2374 when Dukat, acting as a conduit for the exiled Pah-wraiths, attacked the Orb of Contemplation, which was then housed on Deep Space 9. Following Dukat's attack, all of the Orbs went dark, and the wormhole itself disappeared. Dukat's aim was to force the Prophets out and make the wormhole passable again for Dominion reinforcements, although he did not anticipate that the wormhole would collapse. (DS9: "Tears of the Prophets", "Covenant")
The disappearance of the wormhole and the apparent loss of contact with their deities caused great consternation and fear among the Bajorans, as well as the rise of the Cult of the Pah-wraiths. The wormhole remained closed for the next three months, until Benjamin Sisko, acting as the Emissary of the Prophets, discovered the Orb of the Emissary on Tyree in early 2375. The discovery of the previously-unknown tenth Orb caused the re-opening of the wormhole. (DS9: "Image in the Sand", "Shadows and Symbols")
Later that year, Dukat told Damar that he had no regrets in failing to reopen the wormhole by killing the Prophets. (DS9: "Penumbra")
Jake Sisko, along with Colonel Kira Nerys, watched the wormhole opening from the Promenade at the end of 2375 after Captain Sisko defeated Dukat in the Fire Caves and the Dominion War had finally ended. (DS9: "What You Leave Behind")
One of the Bajoran tarot cards owned by Shaxs was the "Celestial Temple" card, which depicted the wormhole. (LD: "Empathological Fallacies")
Bajoran system |
---|
B'hava'el |
Bajor I • Bajor II • Bajor III • Bajor IV • Bajor V • Bajor VI • Bajor VII • Bajor VIII • Bajor IX • Bajor X • Bajor (Bajor XI) • Bajor XII • Bajor XIII • Bajor XIV |
Jeraddo • Derna • Denorios belt • Bajoran wormhole |
See also[]
Appendices[]
Appearances[]
- DS9:
- "Emissary" (Pilot, Season 1)
- "Past Prologue"
- "Captive Pursuit"
- "Q-Less"
- "Move Along Home"
- "The Nagus"
- "Vortex"
- "Battle Lines"
- "The Storyteller"
- "The Forsaken"
- "Dramatis Personae"
- "In the Hands of the Prophets"
- "Melora" (Season 2)
- "Sanctuary"
- "The Alternate"
- "Whispers"
- "Playing God"
- "Crossover"
- "The Jem'Hadar"
- "The Search, Part I" (Season 3)
- "The Search, Part II"
- "Destiny"
- "Prophet Motive"
- "Visionary"
- "The Die is Cast"
- "The Visitor" (Season 4)
- "Hippocratic Oath"
- "The Sword of Kahless"
- "Homefront"
- "Crossfire"
- "Accession"
- "Hard Time"
- "To the Death"
- "The Quickening"
- "Body Parts"
- "Broken Link"
- "The Assignment" (Season 5)
- "In Purgatory's Shadow"
- "By Inferno's Light"
- "Call to Arms"
- "Sacrifice of Angels" (Season 6)
- "The Reckoning"
- "Tears of the Prophets"
- "Shadows and Symbols" (Season 7)
- "What You Leave Behind"
Additional references[]
- DS9:
- "If Wishes Were Horses" (Season 1)
- "The Homecoming" (Season 2)
- "The Circle"
- "The Siege"
- "Invasive Procedures"
- "Rivals"
- "Paradise"
- "Shadowplay"
- "The Maquis, Part I"
- "Equilibrium" (Season 3)
- "The Way of the Warrior" (Season 4)
- "Rules of Engagement"
- "The Ascent" (Season 5)
- "Rapture"
- "For the Uniform"
- "Children of Time"
- "A Time to Stand" (Season 6)
- "Behind the Lines"
- "Favor the Bold"
- "You Are Cordially Invited"
- "One Little Ship"
- "Image in the Sand" (Season 7)
- "Covenant"
- "Penumbra"
- VOY:
Background information[]
The visual effect for the wormhole was created by Rhythm & Hues. Michael Gibson of Rhythm and Hues described the wormhole thusly: "It blossoms suddenly out of black space, with multiple layers of swirling gaseous clouds, miles in diameter, centered with a mushroom dome that irises open to reveal a tunnel pulsing with an energy field of rippling shock waves that explodes from the aperture, blazing with an atmosphere lit by a deep interior sun". (Cinefantastique, issue 97, Vol 24 #3/4)
Peter Lauritson commented: "the wormhole effects were cutting edge when we did them". (Star Trek: The Official Starships Collection, issue 147, p.14)
According to the Stellar Cartography: The Starfleet Reference Library ("Stellar Cartography", p. 42), the wormhole "cut a 70,000 light year journey between the two quadrants down to two minutes".
Apocrypha[]
In the novelization of Emissary, immediately after Dukat is rescued from the wormhole, he attempts to lay claim to it based on Cardassia's long-standing Occupation of Bajor, before Sisko coolly informs him that he has reached an agreement with the Prophets on behalf of the Federation and Bajor that they will control the wormhole, and anyone trying to go through it without the permission of those sides would find themselves lost somewhere mid-way between the wormhole's entrances (although given later events with various sides using the wormhole this may have been at least partly a bluff).
In the novel The Siege, a Borg cube tries to pass through the wormhole and is destroyed by subspace compression; Sisko concludes that this event will cause the Borg Collective to believe that the wormhole is unstable and would avoid it from then on (explaining the absence of the Borg from Deep Space Nine).
In the novel Devil in the Sky, Starfleet maintained a team on Deep Space 9 dedicated to studying the wormhole.
In the Deep Space Nine book trilogy Millennium, there was a second Bajoran wormhole, a Pah-wraith wormhole that opened when the three Orbs of the Pah-wraiths were brought together in Quark's. The second wormhole actually opened inside of Quark's, ripping Deep Space 9 to pieces. The opening of the second wormhole nearly spelled Armageddon for the entire universe as, in an alternate future, Kai Weyoun 5 triggered a gravimetric explosion that brought both wormholes together, causing them to connect to each other and swallow the entire universe. However, thanks to the actions of Ben Sisko, the crew of the USS Defiant, and Elim Garak, Quark, and Jake Sisko (who were close enough to the wormholes to be absorbed directly into the dimension of the Prophets and the Pah-wraiths when the wormholes opened rather than being consumed), these events were undone when they took advantage of a temporal anomaly inside the wormhole dimension – putting them in touch with DS9 prior to its destruction and in the last days of the Occupation – to alter the events leading up to the destruction of Deep Space 9 – without altering anything that would prevent them being in a position to make those changes, culminating in them destroying a ship from that alternate future and using the energy to prevent the second wormhole forming in the first place.
In the DS9 relaunch series and the subsequent Typhon Pact series, a renegade branch of the Typhon Pact – an alliance of the Federation's enemies – manage to create an artificial wormhole that 'connects' to the Bajoran wormhole so that they can enter the Gamma Quadrant in secret in the novel Raise the Dawn, believing that Dominion technology will help them develop their own version of the quantum slipstream drive. This artificial wormhole is destroyed by Kira Nerys, but her attack apparently costs her her life and closes the Bajoran wormhole, leaving Odo trapped in the Alpha Quadrant. The wormhole remained sealed for two years until the official "re-opening" of the new DS9 in The Fall: Revelation and Dust.
External links[]
- Bajoran wormhole at Memory Beta, the wiki for licensed Star Trek works
- Bajoran wormhole at Wikipedia