Star Trek eventually spawned a franchise, consisting of eight television series, 13 feature films, and numerous books, games, and toys, ... People magazine commented in 1977 that the show "threatens to rerun until the universe crawls back into its little black hole". The current consensus is that super-massive black holes are at the center of most, if not all, galaxies. Strange how no on ever said "what about a black hole (of some kind)? A black hole is a region of space-time wherein an extremely strong gravitational field prevents anything, including light, from escaping. Directed by J.J. Abrams. This drink was available on the menu at Quark's on Deep Space 9's Promenade. Much of the recording equipment used to create the movie's intricately complicated sound effects was, at the time, extremely cutting-edge. Anyhow those types of wormholes seem too rare even in the vast universe, while nebulas are abundant. A black hole was a variety of alcoholic cocktail beverage that was named after the black hole astronomical phenomena. It is a dense remnant of a star that has collapsed into a singularity under its own gravity upon running out of fuel. No way Star Trek has ever had the budget or means to do that.That does sound like the most plausible explanation, but on the other hand there were plenty of times where they didn't shy away from a story even though it was completely technically infeasible at the time and everything looked like crap visually.They also embellished all sorts of things to look way more intense and cool than they would in reality. Star Trek XI - 27 - Black Holes Have A Lot Of Pull (choir restored) - Back From Black - Duration: 1:56. No slash fic.

With Chris Pine, Zachary Quinto, Simon Pegg, Leonard Nimoy. (DS9: "Bar Association") Jadzia Dax also has a taste for this drink after it was introduced to a former host by a bartender he/she had known for a 100 years. This black hole looking thing comes up and I just realize I've seen like 3 black holes in 700+ episodes of space sci-fi.As for rarity, the showrunners never cared in the slightest about things like that, so I'm surprised they didn't abuse black holes like they abused many other rare or even impossible concepts.That's a great observation, but we do know that not all the writers were nearly that meticulous about the canon to respect that. I'm reminded of the quote from Berman or whoever where he said they'd just sit in silence in the writer's room near the end of Voyager with absolutely no ideas. In TOS "Tomorrow is Yesterday" the Enterprise accidentally slingshots around one (the call it a dark star) and goes back in time.there is a voyager episode centered on exactly what your talking about. Black holes are arguably the most popular and well known space phenomenon that we know exists.
E.g. Episodes mainly seem to feature all sorts of made up and/or bland phenomena (which are just fancy nebulae 90% of the time too) or wormholes. "I don't know if I agree that the story potential is all that strong. This drink is enjoyed by Boslic captain who unknowingly brought An email will not be created automatically. the warp star effect, the Bajoran wormhole, the warp core, the transporter effect, any time a non corporeal being conveniently looks like a blob of light...Yes that and the one mentioned above in voyager are the only 2 as far as I can remember.They talk about microsingularities in "Shuttlepod One".There was a black hole in Star Trek before we knew what they were. Your password must include at least 8 characters with a combination of upper/lower case, number and symbol.