Difference between revisions of "Phoenix"

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{{DISPLAYTITLE:''Phoenix''}}
 
{{DISPLAYTITLE:''Phoenix''}}
{{ImageBox|imgname=phoenix-st-08-2|caption=The ''Phoenix'' ([[Star Trek: First Contact (Film)|ST08]])}}
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{{ImageInfoBox2|name=''Phoenix''|file=phoenix-st-08-2.jpg|caption=The ''Phoenix'' ({{ST08}})}}
The first spacecraft launched from [[Earth]] with a [[Warp drive|faster-than-light engine]], the ''Phoenix'' was built by noted space pioneer [[Cochrane, Zefram|Zefram Cochrane]] and engineer [[Sloane, Lily|Lily Sloane]] from an old [[Titan V]] nuclear missile, modified with a small crew cabin and twin warp nacelles. The ''Phoenix'' made its first historic warp flight on April 5, 2063, and was piloted by Cochrane, symbolically rising from the ashes of [[World War III]], ushering in a new era for [[Humans|humanity]]. The flight of the ''Phoenix'' was directly responsible for Earth's first contact with extraterrestrials, leading to Earth's recovery from the [[Postatomic horror]]. The ''Phoenix'' was later placed on display at the [[Smithsonian Institute]], and was featured in a mandatory course taught at [[Starfleet Academy]] on basic warp design.<ref name="ST08"/>
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{{TableRow|title=Launched|data={{date|Prime|2063|4|5}}}}
{{ShipsPhoenix}}
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{{FirstData|ST08|1996|11|22}}
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The first spacecraft launched from [[Earth]] with a [[warp drive|faster-than-light engine]], the ''Phoenix'' was built by noted space pioneer [[Zefram Cochrane]] and engineer [[Lily Sloane]] from an old [[Titan V]] [[nuclear weapons|nuclear missile]], modified with a small crew cabin and twin warp nacelles. The ''Phoenix'' made its first historic warp flight on [[2063#APR05|5 April 2063]], and was piloted by Cochrane, symbolically rising from the ashes of [[World War III]], ushering in a new era for [[Humans|humanity]]. The flight of the ''Phoenix'' was directly responsible for Earth's first contact with extraterrestrials, leading to Earth's recovery from the [[postatomic horror]]. The ''Phoenix'' was later placed on display at the [[Smithsonian Institute]], and was featured in a mandatory course taught at [[Starfleet Academy]] on basic warp design.<ref name="ST08"/>
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==Image Gallery==
 
<gallery mode="packed">
 
<gallery mode="packed">
 
phoenix-st-08.jpg|The ''Phoenix'' ([[Star Trek: First Contact (Film)|ST08]])
 
phoenix-st-08.jpg|The ''Phoenix'' ([[Star Trek: First Contact (Film)|ST08]])
 
phoenix-st-08-2.jpg|The ''Phoenix'' ([[Star Trek: First Contact (Film)|ST08]])
 
phoenix-st-08-2.jpg|The ''Phoenix'' ([[Star Trek: First Contact (Film)|ST08]])
 
</gallery>
 
</gallery>
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{{ShipsPhoenix|width=60%}}
 
{{References}}
 
{{References}}
 
<references>
 
<references>
<ref name="ST08">''[[Star Trek: First Contact (Film)|Star Trek: First Contact]].'' Film. 22 November 1996.</ref>
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Latest revision as of 07:59, 6 October 2023

Phoenix
The Phoenix (ST08)

The Phoenix (ST08)
Launched 5 Apr 2063
First Appearance ST08 (22 Nov 1996)
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Prime Timeline
(The root of all realities)


The first spacecraft launched from Earth with a faster-than-light engine, the Phoenix was built by noted space pioneer Zefram Cochrane and engineer Lily Sloane from an old Titan V nuclear missile, modified with a small crew cabin and twin warp nacelles. The Phoenix made its first historic warp flight on 5 April 2063, and was piloted by Cochrane, symbolically rising from the ashes of World War III, ushering in a new era for humanity. The flight of the Phoenix was directly responsible for Earth's first contact with extraterrestrials, leading to Earth's recovery from the postatomic horror. The Phoenix was later placed on display at the Smithsonian Institute, and was featured in a mandatory course taught at Starfleet Academy on basic warp design.[1]

Image Gallery

Notes and References