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  2. List of Star Trek regions of space - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Star_Trek_regions...

    In the fictional Star Trek universe, the Bajoran wormhole is a spatial anomaly located within 160,000,000 kilometres (1.1 au) (DS9 S1Ep2: "Emissary (Part 2)") of the planet Bajor. It appears as an aperture of swirling golden-white light surrounded by blue clouds, which appears whenever a vessel approaches or exits from it and disappears again ...

  3. Teleportation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Teleportation

    The cups and balls trick has been performed since 3 BC [13] and can involve balls vanishing, reappearing, teleporting and transposing (objects in two locations interchanging places). A common trick of close-up magic is the apparent teleportation of a small object, such as a marked playing card, which can involve sleight-of-hand, misdirection ...

  4. Extrasolar planets in fiction - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Extrasolar_planets_in_fiction

    [3] [9] [14] [15] A planet in the shape of a torus is the setting of Flint's 1921 short story "The Emancipatrix", being the result of the protoplanetary disk condensing so quickly that it did not coalesce into a spherical shape first; an artificial planet-sized torus also appears in John P. Boyd [Wikidata] 's 1981 short story "Moonbow", while ...

  5. Shadow Raiders - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shadow_Raiders

    The Sand people find the Prison Planet and guide the planet back to the Alliance system. The planet teleports back, appearing between the Beast Planet and Planet Rock. As the Beast Planet's claw closes onto the Prison Planet, Sternum activates the teleport engines, teleporting both the Prison and Beast Planets to parts unknown.

  6. Teleportation in fiction - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Teleportation_in_fiction

    Teleportation is the theoretical transfer of matter or energy from one point to another without traversing the physical space between them. [1] It is a common subject in science fiction and fantasy literature, film, video games, and television.

  7. Kepler-186f - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kepler-186f

    Kepler-186f [2] [3] (also known by its Kepler object of interest designation KOI-571.05) is an Earth-sized exoplanet orbiting within the habitable zone of the red dwarf star Kepler-186, [4] [5] [6] the outermost of five such planets discovered around the star by NASA's Kepler space telescope.

  8. Quantum teleportation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quantum_teleportation

    Quantum teleportation is a technique for transferring quantum information from a sender at one location to a receiver some distance away. While teleportation is commonly portrayed in science fiction as a means to transfer physical objects from one location to the next, quantum teleportation only transfers quantum information. The sender does ...

  9. Haumea - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Haumea

    Haumea (minor-planet designation: 136108 Haumea) is a dwarf planet located beyond Neptune's orbit. [25] It was discovered in 2004 by a team headed by Mike Brown of Caltech at the Palomar Observatory, and formally announced in 2005 by a team headed by José Luis Ortiz Moreno at the Sierra Nevada Observatory in Spain, who had discovered it that year in precovery images taken by the team in 2003.