Difference between revisions of "U.S.S. Tsiolkovsky NCC-53911"

From Trekipedia
Jump to: navigation, search
m
 
(5 intermediate revisions by the same user not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
[[File:tsiolkovsky_53911-tng-103.jpg|350px|thumb|right|U.S.S. ''Tsiolkovsky''<ref name="TNG103"/>]]
+
{{DISPLAYTITLE:U.S.S. ''Tsiolkovsky'' NCC-53911}}
[[File:tsiolkovsky_53911_dedication_plaque-tng-103.jpg|350px|thumb|right|U.S.S. ''Tsiolkovsky'' dedication plaque<ref name="TNG103"/>]]
+
{{MyriadTsiolkovsky}}
 
+
{{ImageInfoBox2|name=U.S.S. ''Tsiolkovsky''|file=tsiolkovsky_53911-tng103.jpg|caption=U.S.S. ''Tsiolkovsky'' ({{TNG103}})}}
The [[United Federation of Planets|Federation]] Starship ''Tsiolkovsky,'' an ''[[Oberth class]]'' vessel, was commissioned in March 2342.<ref name="FASA2012"/> In 2363, on Stardate 41209.2, the ''Tsiolkovsky'' was discovered adrift in orbit of [[STAR NAME]], its entire crew dead from the effects of the [[Psi 2000 Virus]]. The ''Tsiolkovsky'' was destroyed when the star, which was entering into an unstable expansion phase, released a fragment of stellar matter that vaporized the ship upon impact.<ref name="TNG103"/>
+
{{RegistryData|[[NCC-53911]]<ref name="Ency1"/>}}
 
+
{{Class|[[Oberth class|''Oberth'']]}}
==Note==
+
{{Commissioned|{{SD|Prime|2349|SD40291|40291.7}}}}
''Named for [[Humans|Human]] space pioneer Konstantin Tsiolkovsky.<ref name="Ency"/> Although the "[[Star Trek: The Next Generation Officer's Manual (FASA-2012)|Star Trek: The Next Generation Officer's Manual]]" lists the ''Tsiolkovsky'' as a ''Sagan'' class vessel with the registry of NCC-20000, this class designation was superseded by the ''Oberth'' class name, and the ship's registry was clearly given as NCC-53911 on screen. The information provided makes it clear that the ''Tsiolkovsky'' listed in the "Officer's Manual" was intended to represent the same vessel, so the conflicting information must be disregarded.''
+
{{Status|{{Destroyed}} ({{SD|Prime|2363|SD41209|41209.2}})}}
 
+
{{FirstData|TNG103|1988|10|5}}
<div style="clear:both;">&nbsp;</div>
+
{{Ad|AmazonTNGBD}}
==References==
+
|}</div>
 +
{{banner|Prime}}
 +
{{ImageBox2|float=left|file=tsiolkovsky_53911_dedication_plaque-tng-103.jpg|caption=U.S.S. ''Tsiolkovsky'' dedication plaque ({{TNG103}})}}
 +
The [[United Federation of Planets|Federation]] Starship ''Tsiolkovsky,'' an [[Oberth class|''Oberth'' class]] vessel<ref name="TNG103"/> named for [[Humans|Human]] space pioneer [[Konstantin Tsiolkovsky]],<ref name="Ency1"/> was commissioned on {{SD|Prime|2349|SD40291|40291.7|no}} at [[Baikonur Cosmodrome]] on [[Earth]]. The ship's dedication plaque featured the quote, "The Earth is the cradle of the mind but one cannot remain in the cradle forever." In [[2363]], on {{SD|Prime|2363|SD41209|41209.2}}, the ''Tsiolkovsky'' was discovered adrift in orbit of a collapsing red supergiant star, its entire 80-person crew dead from the effects of [[polywater intoxication]]. The ''Tsiolkovsky'' was destroyed when the star, which was entering into an unstable expansion phase, released a fragment of stellar matter that vaporized the abandoned ship upon impact, buying time for the [[U.S.S. Enterprise NCC-1701-D|U.S.S. ''Enterprise'' NCC-1701-D]] to escape.<ref name="TNG103"/>
 +
{{ClassOberth}}
 +
{{References}}
 
<references>
 
<references>
<ref name="TNG103">"[[The Naked Now (Episode)|The Naked Now]]." ''[[Star Trek: The Next Generation]],'' Episode 103. Television. 5 October 1987.</ref>
+
<ref name="TNG103">{{RefTNG103}}</ref>
<ref name="FASA2012">"[[Star Trek: The Next Generation Officer's Manual (FASA-2012)|Star Trek: The Next Generation Officer's Manual]]." ''[[Star Trek: The Roleplaying Game]],'' Supplement 2012. Game. 1988. FASA.</ref>
+
<ref name="Ency1">{{RefEncy1}}</ref>
<ref name="Ency">"[[The Star Trek Encyclopedia (Book)|The Star Trek Encyclopedia]]." Book. 1997 (rev. ed.). Pocket Books.</ref>
 
 
</references>
 
</references>
 
+
{{DEFAULTSORT|Tsiolkovsky, U.S.S. NCC-53911}}
[[Category:Library|Tsiolkovsky, U.S.S., NCC-53911]]
+
[[Category:Library]]
[[Category:Ships & Vehicles|Tsiolkovsky, U.S.S., NCC-53911]]
+
[[Category:Ships & Vehicles]]
[[Category:TNG|Tsiolkovsky, U.S.S., NCC-53911]]
+
[[Category:Federation]]
[[Category:Film|Tsiolkovsky, U.S.S., NCC-53911]]
+
[[Category:Starfleet Vessels]]
 +
[[Category:Destroyed Vessels]]
 +
[[Category:Ships by Registry|53911, Tsiolkovsky, U.S.S.]]
 +
[[Category:TNG]]
 +
[[Category:Books]]
 +
[[Category:Film]]
 +
[[Category:Prime Timeline]]

Latest revision as of 05:31, 12 November 2023

Myriad Universes: U.S.S. Tsiolkovsky
U.S.S. Tsiolkovsky
U.S.S. Tsiolkovsky (TNG103)

U.S.S. Tsiolkovsky (TNG103)
Registry NCC-53911[1]
Class Oberth
Commissioned SD40291.7
Status Destroyed (SD41209.2)
First Appearance TNG103 (5 Oct 1988)
Advertising
Prime Timeline
(The root of all realities)


U.S.S. Tsiolkovsky dedication plaque (TNG103)

U.S.S. Tsiolkovsky dedication plaque (TNG103)

The Federation Starship Tsiolkovsky, an Oberth class vessel[2] named for Human space pioneer Konstantin Tsiolkovsky,[1] was commissioned on Stardate 40291.7 at Baikonur Cosmodrome on Earth. The ship's dedication plaque featured the quote, "The Earth is the cradle of the mind but one cannot remain in the cradle forever." In 2363, on SD41209.2, the Tsiolkovsky was discovered adrift in orbit of a collapsing red supergiant star, its entire 80-person crew dead from the effects of polywater intoxication. The Tsiolkovsky was destroyed when the star, which was entering into an unstable expansion phase, released a fragment of stellar matter that vaporized the abandoned ship upon impact, buying time for the U.S.S. Enterprise NCC-1701-D to escape.[2]


Notes and References

  1. 1.0 1.1 Okuda, Michael et al (Authors). The Star Trek Encyclopedia. Star Trek. Book, First Edition. Illustrations by Doug Drexler. Pocket Books. April 1994.
  2. 2.0 2.1 Roddenberry, Gene (Executive Producer). "The Naked Now". Star Trek: The Next Generation, season 1, episode 3 (Production number 103). Co-Executive Producers: Rick Berman & Maurice Hurley. Directed by Paul Lynch. Story by John D.F. Black & J. Michael Bingham. Teleplay by J. Michael Bingham. Paramount Pictures. 5 October 1987.