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Stargate (device)

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A typical depiction of a Stargate.

Stargates are fictional devices that feature as a central part of stories set in the Stargate science fiction universe. They are uniformly depicted as large, usually vertical metal rings. In the stories, their function is to teleport people or objects across the vast distances of space.[1]

They first appeared in the 1994 film Stargate, directed by Roland Emmerich, and then were redesigned to subsequently appear in the television series Stargate SG-1 and Stargate Atlantis (as well as the animated series Stargate Infinity).[2] The Stargate is the central plot generator of these productions, allowing for stories focused on a small team of protagonists exploring other planets and meeting other races on foot, rather than the more prevalent, grandiose "space opera" of interstellar starships seen elsewhere in science fiction.

In the fictional Goa'uld language the stargate is referred to as the Chappa'ai (Cha-Pa-Eye). The word for the gate is also used by many of the inhabitants of the Stargate worlds; no doubt brought to them by the Goa'uld System Lords. The Gates have also been referred to as the "Ring of the Gods", "Circle of Standing Water", "Doorway", "Stone Ring", "Annulus", "Ring of the Ancestors" and "Portal" (by characters of less advanced societies that fear or revere the device).

Stargates are marked out by nine chevrons spaced equally around their circumference (See the Schematic diagram below), and 39 symbols displayed on an inner ring.[2] They are typically 22 ft (6.7 m) in diameter, 64,000 lbs in weight,[3] and held to be made of the fictional heavy mineral "Naqahdah". The gates are almost always seen standing vertically.

In the mythology of the canon, their creators were an alien race known as the Ancients,[2] who called them the Astria Porta in their language, and scattered them on a variety of planets and moons, throughout the Milky Way and other galaxies millions of years ago. In Template:Sgcite, Teal'c stated that many were later terraformed by the Goa'uld.[4] Collectively, these comprise what is called the "Stargate Network", as they facilitate interaction between distant planets. The plot of Stargate effectively begins when the United States Air Force discovers how to use one of these devices that was discovered on Earth and begin to explore the galaxy through its use.[1] Although Stargates are present on many planets, most of the races they encounter are relatively primitive, and view the gates as no more than divine, sacred or terrifying relics, as evidenced by such names as "Ring of the Gods" and "Circle of Darkness".[4][5][6]

Conceptual origin

File:SG-1 True Science Wormhole.jpg
Diagram to illustrate the concept of how a Stargate creates a passage to the Moon, seen in "Stargate SG-1: True Science".

The basic notion of the Stargate concept is to have at least two mechanical devices (Stargates) in two distant positions, such that, when active, the rings of each become similar to a physical, singular gateway or door-frame between the two locations. This is achieved due to some kind of advanced technology that creates a type of "tunnel" between the gates.

The concept was developed by the writers of the feature film Stargate, Dean Devlin and Roland Emmerich. Similar devices had been seen in previous fiction, but their complete conception as seen in the film was quite original — though there has been contention as to whether they plagiarized the idea from a previous script submission.[7] The Stargate was further developed conceptually by the creators of the spin-off television series Stargate SG-1, Brad Wright and Jonathan Glassner.

The idea of a "portal" for travelers has been seen often throughout the history of both fantasy and science fiction, often taking a similar form, a device or magical object shaped as a regular or irregular closed geometric form filled with a water-like, rippling puddle that represents the boundary point between the two locations. The Stargate picks up heavily on this conception, emphasizing the "watery puddle" for the sake of an alien mystique.

The developers of the concept have also made some attempt to explain how Stargates work in terms of soft science fiction. Their explanations are based heavily in theoretical astrophysics, particularly that of black holes and wormholes. A wormhole is held to be a warping of spacetime that causes space to become "folded", supposedly allowing for "shortcuts" through space. Although these may exist in reality, it is not widely held to be true that any such phenomenon could safely transport a human being,[8] as such wormholes would most likely be created by excessive gravity (e.g. from a black hole) which would destroy any potential traveler.[9]

Operation

The film Stargate rushed very quickly over how a Stargate actually works and is operated, but the subsequent television shows go into this area in a great amount of detail. In SG-1, it is explained that a Stargate's destination is not fixed, but is singled out by a process known as "dialing".[10] Once a destination is selected by the traveler, the Stargate generates a wormhole between itself and a complementary device at the destination, by being supplied with a threshold amount of raw energy.[11] Objects in transit between gates are broken down into their individual elemental components, and then into energy as they pass through the event horizon, and then travel through a wormhole before being reconstructed on the other side.[1]

Dialing

The seventh chevron in the series.

Each location served by a Stargate has its own unique "address", which is a combination of seven or more non-repeating symbols appearing on the dialing Stargate.[12][10] By "dialing" these symbols in the correct order, the traveler selects a destination.

The show is consistent with the mechanics of address-dialing. The process involves associating a unique symbol of the inner ring to each of at least the first seven of the chevrons on the outer circumference. The main "address" is invariably dialed first, and the last symbol being the "point of origin" " representing the gate being used, which acts as the final trigger for the completion of the address sequence.[13] As each symbol is dialed, the chevron is said to "engage" and usually responds by lighting up or moving. When the final symbol of an address is dialed, that chevron is said to "lock" and the wormhole opens (this terminology is arbitrary and often interchangeable, but preferred by the recurring character Walter Harriman).[13] If the address is incorrect or does not correspond to an existing or otherwise functional Stargate, the last chevron will not lock, and all of the chevrons will disengage.[11]

Addresses

The SGC's Dialing Computer compiling an address.
This diagram illustrates how Stargate symbols translate to physical coordinates.

The symbols used to comprise addresses are actually images of constellations. By identifying six constellations in space, a single point can be extrapolated that corresponds to the destination desired.[1] It is assumed by the show that this is enough to identify the position of any Stargate within a galaxy. The symbols dialed are often referred to as "coordinates", and are written as an ordered string; for example, this is the address used in the show for the planet Abydos: Template:Milky Way Gate Address (corresponding to the constellations of Taurus, Serpens Caput, Capricornus, Monoceros, Sagittarius and Orion). As explained by Dr Daniel Jackson in the movie, the Stargate requires seven correct symbols to connect to another Stargate. As shown in the picture opposite, the first six symbols act as co-ordinates, creating three intersecting lines, the destination. The Stargate uses the seventh symbol as the point of origin allowing you to plot a straight line course to the destination.

Eight-symbol addresses were introduced in Template:Sgcite, opening up new plot lines by connecting Stargates to different galaxies. The additional symbol acts as a type of "area code".[14] Such connections, in comparison to seven symbol codes, required substantially more energy to complete a functional wormhole — much more than any standard dialing method can provide. Opening an intergalactic wormhole has been shown to require large amounts of power compared to a regular wormhole. This has been generated in a variety of ways in different episodes, although the main way is using a Zero Point Module (ZPM).[15][16][14][17]

The show has never featured a nine-symbol address, so the purpose of the ninth chevron is unknown. The extra chevrons are so rarely used that Stargates are often seen with those two chevrons embedded within the stone platforms that hold many of the gate upright (see the image at the top of this article). This has often led to the misconception that a Stargate only has seven chevrons.

Dial-Home Device

A Dial-Home Device

There are a handful of methods used in the shows to dial a Stargate, and the most common is with the use of a Dial-Home Device. Almost always referred to as the "DHD" for short, it is depicted as a pedestal-shaped device with a round inclined control panel on top, consisting of two concentric circles of "keys", and a translucent red (Milky Way) or blue (Pegasus) hemisphere in the center; the keys represent the symbols on the rim of the Stargate. By pressing these keys a traveler builds an address. The central hemisphere serves as an "Enter" key to activate the Stargate once a destination has been dialed. In the Milky Way, the Dial-Home-Device contains 38 of the 39 symbols on the Stargate, meaning there is always a missing glyph on each DHD. This missing glyph however is not the point of origin for the planet. It has been confirmed that the missing glyph on numerous DHDs differs based on how each stargate is positioned on different planets. The glyph that is hidden under the pedestal of the stargate, unseen along with the two chevrons, cannot be dialed by the DHD. This states that only certain addresses can be reached in certain positions in the galaxy as a safety mechanism. In one episode of the SG-1 show, the team, because they did not have a DHD on the Stargate on Earth, overrode the mechanism, passing through the center of the star almost destroying that system. The mechanism in this case, was only activated temporarily because the star's orbit would have intersected the Stargate for a short period of time. The only way to intervene and reach all destinations in the Milky Way is to manually dial the gate, or use an alternative dialer, such as the one at the SGC.[18]

The show makes it clear that every Stargate originally had its own DHD, located directly in front of the gate and facing it.[11] Over time, however, some DHDs have been damaged or lost. This has been the source of plot-difficulties for the protagonists on several occasions, as it is still possible to travel to a Stargate that lacks a DHD, meaning that dialing home again will be much more difficult, if not impossible. One of the primary functions of the MALP that precedes an SG team is to confirm the presence of a functioning DHD.[11]

The Wormhole

Side-on view of a Stargate as an unstable vortex ("kawoosh") is ejected.
File:Kawoosh tail.jpg
In the film, the kawoosh inverted after initial ejection.

Once an address is dialed, the gate is said to have created a "stable wormhole" between itself and the gate dialed. The creation process is depicted with great consistency, and hence has become one of the defining motifs of Stargate, at times being central in both the SG-1 and Atlantis title sequences. It involves the generation of the "puddle of water" portal which lasts roughly 2 seconds, and is completed by the ejection of an unstable energy vortex called the "kawoosh", resembling a surge of water or quicksilver. The "kawoosh" is portrayed as a symbol of the Stargate's power, invariably causing characters to be awed,[19] reflecting or imbuing the awe of the audience, and any matter contacted by the "kawoosh" effect is destroyed, save for the inevitable smoking shoes.[20]

Power for the wormhole can be drawn from both the point of origin (the dialing Stargate's power source) and the destination.[21] One of the most basic and repeated axioms of Wormhole Physics, the (fictionalized) field of study pioneered by the character Samantha Carter, is that unless an extraordinary amount of energy is being generated at either end, a wormhole can only be maintained for 38 minutes at a time.

The actual portal of a Stargate appears inside the inner ring when an address is correctly dialed. This has the appearance of a vertical puddle of water which represents the "event horizon" in the show. In non-fictional parlance, an event horizon is the perimeter around a black hole or wormhole through which once one had crossed, the gravitational pull of the singularity would be too strong to overcome. The wavering undulations characteristic of water are supposed to represent the "fluctuations in the event horizon".[10] This puddle may then be entered (usually accompanied by a water-like sound), and the traveler will emerge from a similar pool at the destination Stargate. The show makes it clear that transit is strictly one-way; an attempt to travel "backwards" causes the traveler to be destroyed[22] (though during the episode Template:Sgcite and in the first episode a man partially puts his hand through the event horizon of the destination gate and pulls it back with no apparent issues[23] However, as matter is only transmitted through a Stargate once the whole object has passed the event horizon (except in the same A Hundred Days episode where Teal'c dangled from a rope secured to a ceiling on the other side) the Stargate would not have started to try to deconstruct him, instead waiting until he was entirely inside). It is unknown why radio transmissions (Such as from a MALP) function in reverse through a wormhole. Additionally, the outgoing gate is invariably entered from the same side as the gate's "kawoosh"; the show has not demonstrated what happens if a traveler enters from the wrong side.

File:Wormhole old.jpg
The "classic"-style wormhole seen in both the film and early SG-1.
File:New wormhole.jpg
The "new"-style wormhole seen in late SG-1.
File:Atlantis wormhole.jpg
The wormhole seen in Atlantis.

Passage through a Stargate is usually accompanied by a visual effect of shooting through a tunnel in space, though it is just meant to be a visual aid. The representation of the transit is sometimes almost instantaneous, and other times it appears to last up to 20 seconds. This is thought to be just a representation of how it might look. Since they are disintegrated, it would be impossible to truly see the inside of a wormhole or travel through it.

The actual time the travel takes on average 6 seconds. Novice travelers often emerge from the gate trembling as if they've been on a "roller coaster ride", and although later often omitted, they are covered in ice crystals from the reintegration.[10] The character Charles Kawalsky compares Stargate travel to pulling "out of a simulated bombing run in an F-16 at eight plus g" because of the energy going through the wormhole at such speed and then being "reintegrated".[10] In other episodes, however, gate travel is superficially no different to stepping through a doorway.[24] This has since been explained as problems with the man-made interface on the Earth gate, and has mostly been fixed over the years of Stargate operations.

The visual effect resembles a spinning wispy tube, and was in Season 9 (and the first season of Atlantis) revamped to resemble a misty tunnel lit by shooting rings of light. The Atlantis wormhole is significantly greener in colour whilst the new-style Milky Way wormhole was blue. The film depicted the first moment Daniel Jackson entered the pool, walking through and remaining in apparently physical form as if the pool was in fact simply a covering for the black of the wormhole beyond.[1]

Known statements about wormhole physics

  • As portrayed in the fictional universe of Stargate, wormhole physics is a field of study that describes the functioning of Stargates and wormholes. It was pioneered by Samantha Carter. In the episode "Upgrades", possessing super-human abilities Samantha Carter wrote an entire book on the subject, claiming she had been wanting to write it for a long time previously but had never been able to find the time as it was such an incredibly complex subject.
  • The maximum period of time a wormhole can be maintained under normal circumstances is slightly more than 38 minutes. This time limit can be circumvented in the presence of continuous high level power generation at at least one end. A wormhole can also be maintained for longer than 38 minutes if time dilation effects cause time to run slower at one end than the other . Under exceptional circumstances, for example when Anubis attacked Earth by turning their own Stargate into a weapon, he was able to keep the wormhole open for longer than 38 minutes by pumping a large amount of energy into it.[25].
  • An object entering a wormhole will retain its kinetic energy upon leaving the other end. In simple terms, anything leaving a wormhole does so at the same speed at which it entered. ("Upgrades")
  • A barrier less than three μm from the event horizon will not allow matter to reintegrate through a wormhole.
  • Matter can only pass one way through a wormhole; matter attempting to enter an incoming wormhole will cease to exist.
  • Radiation can pass through a wormhole in either direction, although this doesn't seem to apply to visible light.
  • Energy to maintain an established wormhole can come from either side.
  • Substantial gravitational force can pass through a wormhole from either side. (IE. the effects of a Black Hole).
  • In "Ripple Effect, Carter claimed the average travel time was 0.3 seconds, contradicting the pilot "Children of the Gods" and other episodes, where it takes roughly six seconds.
  • A large surge of energy delivered to an outgoing wormhole can cause the wormhole to jump from the receiving Stargate to the next nearest one in line. ("Solitudes").
  • An event horizon can be created in the Stargate without a wormhole. ("48 Hours").
  • Outgoing wormholes can be affected by exterior gravitational and electromagnetic forces, causing them to connect to Stargates other than their intended targets.
  • When traveling from one gate to another, if exterior forces redirect the wormhole to the same gate, it will connect to the gate in another time period. ("1969" and "2010").
  • The unstable vortex ("kawoosh") created when a wormhole engages will vaporize anything that comes in contact with it.
  • If a sufficiently dense material blocks the event horizon of a Stargate, it will prevent the event horizon from forming. This will prevent either incoming or outgoing wormholes from being established ("48 Hours").

Complexities of function

Both Stargate SG-1 and Stargate Atlantis introduce complicated facets of Stargates to contrive more interesting plotlines. Some of these have been developed into integral parts of how Stargates function.

Matter transmission

File:Event horizon emerge.jpg
People emerging from a Stargate's event horizon.

When an object passes through the event horizon (the "puddle"), it is not immediately transferred to the destination Stargate, but rather the portion that has passed through is dematerialized and held in a "hyperspatial buffer".[26] An object that hasn't completely passed through the event horizon may be pulled out again,[26] and its atoms will rematerialise from the buffer as it is extracted. The gate does not begin transmitting an object until it has entirely passed through the event horizon. This ensures that only complete objects are transferred. Objects in the buffer remain in a state of suspension. This has been used to "store" people in medical need,[26] but is a dangerous maneuver as when a Stargate is shut down everything still in the buffer "ceases to exist".[27] The unstable vortex ("kawoosh") wipes the buffer clean to receive new information every time the gate activates.[28]

Several facets of the Stargate are necessary for it to function as a useful personnel transporter. Matter emerging from a Stargate retains any kinetic energy it had while entering, so a person running into one Stargate will hit the ground running upon emerging from another. (Weapon projectiles also maintain their trajectory upon transit- a bullet fired through a Stargate is just as dangerous as it would be otherwise) Also, the transmitting Stargate does not allow the air molecules of the local atmosphere to pass through; doing so could be disastrous should a receiving gate be located in a vacuum. The show explains that the Stargate differentiates between objects attempting to pass through the event horizon and things that would naturally exert pressure, such as water, air, lava, etc.[29]

Gate obstruction

A gate obstructed by means of burial

A wormhole is prevented from forming if a significant obstruction is present inside the Stargate's ring. Consequently, it is fairly common for Stargates to be semi- or permanently sealed by burying them, invalidating that Stargate address.

Another means of controlling travel through a Stargate is by placing a barrier a minuscule distance (less than three μm, in the case of the Earth's Iris) from the event horizon,[27] which allows the wormhole to form but prevents the reconstitution of matter upon arrival through the gate. In other words, a connection can be made but any matter trying to exit the gate will not regain its original structure, and hence will be annihilated. The Iris on the Earth Stargate and the Shield on the Atlantis Stargate perform this function, and have been seen to be used as an effective defensive precaution, whilst still allowing radio communication through the open wormhole.

Iris-type barriers also suppress the "kawoosh", but it is unknown why physical barriers are not destroyed by the "kawoosh", as it seems to disintegrate all physical matter it contacts. Such barriers, however, are not the only way to achieve this. Several aliens, including the Asgard and the Nox have demonstrated the ability to open a wormhole without the "kawoosh" (Both races were allies of the Ancients, and may possess better knowledge of the Stargate than other races).

Power source

Power is always required to establish an outgoing wormhole, and is usually supplied by the DHD, but any Stargate can receive a wormhole whether it has a power supply or not; the dialing gate is the one that supplies power to both. In a few cases, Stargates have been dialed "manually" when more sophisticated means were not available. This was accomplished by providing sufficient raw power to the gate and then rotating the symbol ring by hand to lock each chevron.[30] Power can be fed directly into the Naqahdah that comprises the gate; power harnessed from lightning strikes has been shown to be sufficient.[11] The Stargate that establishes an outgoing wormhole determines how long the wormhole is held open, and can generally close the wormhole at will. Under some conditions, a gate only needs enough power to connect briefly, then the receiving gate can provide enough power to maintain the connection.[21] The same is true if the outgoing gate loses power while transmitting; if the incoming gate has a DHD, it will take over powering the gate until reintegration is complete.

Secondary gates

File:Antarctic gate.jpg
The "Antarctic Stargate", Earth's secondary gate

Some planets are known to possess "secondary" or "backup" Stargates.[20] The second Stargate is normally inactive, with the primary Stargate (defined by the presence of a functioning Dial-Home Device) receiving all incoming wormholes.[29] If a Stargate experiences a power surge while an outgoing wormhole is open, the other end of the wormhole has been observed to "jump" to the next closest gate in the network, most likely as a response to destabilization of the wormhole and to prevent it from failing while in use. (The effect can also be used as a defensive measure, as seen in the episode "Prototype"). In the case of a planet with two gates, the closest is the inactive secondary gate. This scenario occurred in the SG-1 first season, and resulted in a second gate being discovered on Earth, located beneath the ice of Antarctica.[20]

The Antarctic gate was later revealed to have originally been the primary stargate on Earth, built by the Ancients. It could in fact be the first stargate ever built.[31] The stargate originally used in the SGC, found in Giza, was brought to Earth, by Ra, from another planet. Since Stargate addresses correspond to planetary locations and not individual gates, the new gate inherited the same address as the one in Antarctica. Because the Antarctic gate had been abandoned millennia earlier by the Ancients and no longer had a connected DHD, Ra's gate became the primary.

In the episode "Nemesis", SG1 transports the stargate from Stargate Command onto a crashing spaceship in order to escape. The gate is replaced at the SGC by the Antarctic gate. The original gate survives the crash, however, and the Russian military takes possession of it to conduct their own off-world travel. Because they were also in possession of a DHD (not found in the original Giza dig but recovered from Germany after WWII), which they activated and deactivated at pre-defined times, they were able to selectively become the primary gate. Using a strict schedule for returning teams, they were able to avoid detection by the US Air Force for some time.[29]

In Redemption, the second stargate was destroyed by Anubis. In order to continue their stargate program, the US Air Force "borrowed" the Giza stargate from the Russians at a hefty price, and this gate is now the only one left on Earth.[3]

Durability

File:GateExplode.jpg
A Stargate intact at the center of a naqahdriah-enhanced nuclear blast.

Stargates are very durable; the oldest in the Milky Way is probably the Antarctic Gate, 50 million years old; the power source may have been younger.[31]

The Stargates themselves are extremely resistant to damage or destruction: in one case, a Stargate survived a direct hit from a meteor,[22] whilst another was still capable of creating a stable wormhole while on a planet near a newly-formed black hole.[25] A Stargate has also been seen to continue functioning whilst entering a sun,[32] though it was protected by a portable forcefield for a portion of its journey. In the SG-1 fourth season episode "Chain Reaction", the SGC sent a naquadah-enhanced nuclear bomb to a planet whose surface had trace amounts of naquadah in its topsoil; the explosion destroyed the entire planet, yet the gate still remained open and intact.

In the ninth season of Stargate SG-1 the United States develops a naqahdriah-enhanced "Gatebuster" nuclear bomb that is theoretically capable of destroying a Stargate (the "Mark IX"). However, when it was first used it failed to destroy the intended Stargate. This could have been because of several mitigating reasons. However in the season 10 epsiode "The Shroud" it is revealed that the Mark IX destroyed a gate.

However, there have been incidents when a Stargate was destroyed. The character Anubis used a piece of Ancient technology to destroy the SGC's Antarctic gate, and used a weapon of his own creation to destroy the gate on Abydos.[33]

Exceptions

Under normal circumstances, a wormhole can only be maintained for slightly more than 38 minutes.[26] However, on a few occasions, this limit has been surpassed. The first breach of this general rule occurred to Earth's gate connected to a planet in the proximity of a black hole.[25] This method was also used intentionally by the Ori.[34] The second incident occurred when energy-rich liquid beings maintained the power for a gate while a Russian vehicle had its transmitter stuck.[29] Finally the third exception happened when Anubis used a weapon made by the Ancients (or with their technology) to slowly feed energy to a Stargate. The gate remained active and eventually exploded.[3]

Susceptibility

The Stargate and its network is susceptible to computer viruses. In the episode Avenger 2.0 the entire stargate network is brought down by a virus created by Dr. Felger. Although not intentional the virus was altered by Ba'al to take the network down. It was previously unknown that each DHD does periodic correlative updates by dialing other gates in close proximity to one another. The updates were designed to compensate for stellar drift to thus maintain the proper coordinates. The Stargate at the SGC uses a human developed "Dialing Computer" rather than a DHD which accounts for the lack of in depth knowledge regarding the DHD's. It is also what saved the network as the Earth stargate was the only gate unaffected by the virus because it has no DHD.

Other uses

In several episodes of the series, the Stargate Network was used for a purpose other than interplanetary travel. In the plots in which these extra functions feature, they are almost always discovered by a fluke, and were not intended in the design of the Stargates. Two such occurrences regard the Stargate's interaction with time, such as "1969", in which the SG-1 team accidentally travels backward in time to the year 1969, as a result of the matter transmission stream passing through a solar flare. The character Samantha Carter intentionally uses this phenomenon in the episode "2010", where she uses advanced technology to predict a flare and send a message back in time. Time is also a factor in the episode "Window of Opportunity", when a scientist uses a failed time machine built by the Ancients to isolate a region defined by 14 Stargates from the rest of the space-time continuum, causing a time loop.

In several episodes, the Stargate, and the cobbled-together dialing program utilized by the SGC, are nearly the cause of disaster. In the episode "Red Sky", the bypassing of a system error caused the Stargate to introduce atoms of plutonium into the center of a star, causing the star to become unstable. In the episode "Ripple Effect", the passage of a Stargate matter stream through a black hole caused the creation of a passageway into alternate realities.

Later in Stargate SG-1 a feature of the Stargate Network, whereby one Stargate can be caused to dial multiple other gates simultaneously, is revealed. This allows a blast wave such as that of the Dakara Superweapon to extend almost indefinitely throughout the galaxy, as seen in "Reckoning". (Baal was known to be able to dial multiple gates simultaneously and it is postulated that this feature of the gate in combination with the Dakara weapon was used to cleanse the galaxy of the plague during the time of the Ancients.

In the episode Template:Sgcite, a stargate was used as a weapon capable of destroying an entire solar system. The gate was dialed into a planet in close proximity to a black hole. The gate (protected by a force field) was then sent into a star. The resulting loss of mass caused the sun to go supernova, destroying the solar system and Apophis's fleet, which was orbiting the star at that time.

Surrounding plot

Template:Spoiler

File:Film stargate.jpg
The Stargate is found, and raised out of the sand.

The Stargate film begins in 1928, when the titular alien device is first discovered and unearthed at Giza. It quickly skips to the "present day" (1994), in which an unsuccessful archaeologist Daniel Jackson is giving a lecture about his outlandish theories that the Egyptian pyramids were not built by the pharaohs. After he is laughed away, an aged Catherine Langford meets with him, and recruits his egyptological talent, taking him to a top-secret military base at Creek Mountain, where he is instructed to decipher the unique Egyptian hieroglyphs present on a set of cover-stones. He realizes that the indecipherable glyphs are in fact not words but images of constellations, such that by identifying 6 of them a position in space can be extrapolated. He is then shown the Stargate itself, uses his new understanding to identify the 7th symbol (the point of origin allowing a route to be extrapolated), and the gate is opened for the first time.

Because thousands of combinations had been previously tried and had failed, it was believed at the time that only two Stargates existed, connecting Earth and the planet Abydos, which was visited in the film. At the beginning of the Stargate SG-1 series, however, a large set of additional valid coordinates were discovered engraved in ruins on Abydos. Because the coordinates pick out stars, and because time leads to stellar drift, other addresses were impossible to dial until Samantha Carter reworked the dialing system on Earth to account for this movement. After this, a massive network of possible connections suddenly became available.

The alien race encountered in the original movie is later developed in SG-1 as the Goa'uld, the dominant evil power in the Milky Way. The leaders of this race, the System Lords, pose as gods and use the Stargates to transport slaves between worlds. This has resulted in a large number of planets throughout the galaxy sporting human life, often in civilizations more primitive than Earth. The majority of these civilizations, descended from former Goa'uld slaves, treat the Stargate as a religious relic, often as a source of long-forgotten fear and evil.

For a long time it was thought that the Goa'uld were the builders of the Stargate Network, but it was later discovered that they had merely made use of the relics left behind by a different and extinct race, the Ancients. The Ancients placed Stargates on thousands of worlds across the galaxy, but the gate network was open to use by all, and continues to be a convenient form of travel for many races. Some races, such as the Goa'uld, grew their ways of life around the gates, which became integral to the functioning of their culture. In turn, most races have their own names for the Stargates. The Ancients called them Astria Porta, a Latin-esque word for "Star Gate"; in Latin, it would really be either porta stellae or porta in astria. The Goa'uld and Jaffa, call them the Chaapa'ai. The English word "Stargate" is a direct calque of Chaapa'ai, and Chaapa'ai is itself a calque of Astria Porta. Many of the humans in our Galaxy refer to them as "Rings of the Gods" and similar variations, and in the Pegasus galaxy, villagers know them as Rings of the Ancestors and variations thereof. They are also commonly referred to as "the ring", "the annulus", or simply "the gate".

For most of the ongoing run of Stargate SG-1, Earth has been under constant threat from the Goa'uld, and is no match for their superior technology. In the face of this threat, the US Air Force established a top-secret base, the SGC (Stargate Command), as a frontline defence. Multiple teams are formed and sent on missions through the Stargate, their primary objective being exploration, and through it the discovery of intelligence, technology and allies to help the fight against the Goa'uld. The primary team is called SG-1, and the series follows their adventures.

At the climax of SG-1's 6th season, Daniel Jackson discovers that the Earth myth of Atlantis is in fact founded upon the Lost City of the Ancients, and Season 7 is spent trying to locate it. At the beginning of the show Stargate Atlantis, which coincides with the beginning of SG-1's 8th season, the city is found in the Pegasus Galaxy, and 8 chevrons are dialed to send an expedition there on what could be a one-way trip. It is there that they discover a new network of Stargates, and are plagued by the nemesis of the Ancients, the Wraith. Template:Endspoiler

Milky Way

Schematic diagram of a Milky Way stargate with glyphs

A Milky Way Stargate has thirty-nine inscribed symbols on the inner ring. When dialing, this inner ring rotates until the dialed symbol is aligned with the seventh chevron, at which point the ring pauses, the seventh chevron moves down and up, and the appropriate chevron in the sequence engages. In the Stargate SG-1 series, an engaged chevron glows red. In the original Stargate film, all of the chevrons use this motion, and none of them glow red.

With 38 symbols, the Stargate Network in the Milky Way has:

(38×37×36×35×34×33)/(1×2×3×4×5×6) = 1,987,690,320 possible addresses.

8-symbol addresses will yield:

(38×37×36×35×34×33×32)/(1×2×3×4×5×6×7) = 63,606,090,240 possible addresses.

If a 9-symbol address operates like 8-symbol addresses it will yield:

(38×37×36×35×34×33×32×31)/(1×2×3×4×5×6×7×8) = 1,971,788,797,440 possible addresses.

However, not all points in space represented by these addresses have stargates, in fact, there are sufficiently few valid coordinate sets that randomly dialing the Stargate is largely futile.[10] If the person dialing does not know the point-of-origin symbol, there are many more possible combinations.

Because the gate on Earth was found without a DHD,[1] the Stargate team on Earth developed the technology to interface with the gate in order to power it and dial it by the use of computers.[10] (Essentially an automated version of 'manual dialing'.) When using a DHD, however, each chevron is activated immediately upon entry of the symbols, without the inner ring spinning. This allows for a much faster dialing process.

Symbols at Giza

Depicted in the original film, the Stargate found at Giza, Egypt was the first discovered by humans of Earth, in 1928. In SG-1 the same gate is used by the SGC for the first 3 seasons to explore other planets.[35] It was discovered in the season seven finale, Lost City, that the glyphs have sylable pronunciations that allow a gate address to be spoken aloud as a destination name. This is how the planet Proclarush Taonas was named. The gate symbols are as follows:

Position Glyph Constellation Position Glyph Constellation Position Glyph Constellation
1 Origin symbol(earth) 14 Microscopium 27 Taurus
2 Crater 15 Capricornus 28 Auriga
3 Virgo 16 Piscis Austrinus 29 Eridanus
4 Boötes 17 Equuleus 30 Orion
5 Centaurus 18 Aquarius 31 Canis Minor
6 Libra 19 Pegasus 32 Monoceros
7 Serpens Caput 20 Sculptor 33 Gemini
8 Norma 21 Pisces 34 Hydra
9 Scorpius 22 Andromeda 35 Lynx
10 Corona Australis 23 Triangulum 36 Cancer
11 Scutum 24 Aries 37 Sextans
12 Sagittarius 25 Perseus 38 Leo Minor
13 Aquila 26 Cetus 39 Leo

This symbol is unique to the Stargate recovered from Giza. In the movie, Dr. Jackson interpreted it as representing the Sun over the peak of a pyramid. Other Stargates are described as having their own unique origin symbols as well.

Pegasus galaxy

File:Pegasus-gate2.jpg
The Atlantis Stargate
File:Pegasus-chevron.jpg
An Atlantis chevron

In the spinoff series Stargate Atlantis, an expedition dials the 8-symbol address Template:Milky Way Gate Address from Stargate Command to travel to the Ancients' Lost City of Atlantis, located in the Pegasus Galaxy. They find that the Ancients seeded planets throughout the Pegasus galaxy with Stargates too, but used gates of a slightly different design. As these gates were built at a later date than the original Milky Way network, they may be of more advanced design, however at this point the differences appear mostly cosmetic.

The alternative Stargate design in the Pegasus galaxy is one of many things the producers of the shows employed to differentiate the sister shows SG-1 and Atlantis. Pegasus Stargates are designed with blue chevron lights instead of orange ones, and the address symbols are groups of small blue lights (rather than embossed figures) that light up sequentially instead of rotating. In SG-1 it is stated that the rotating section of the gate unlocks when sufficient power to dial has been fed to the gate, allowing manual dialing in case the DHD is damaged or not present, as on Earth. In "Phantoms", an off world DHD is destroyed, and Dr. McKay states that there is no way to manually dial the gate. Presumably this is because the Pegasus gates lack the free-rotating central ring.

Schematic diagram of the Atlantis stargate with glyphs

Unlike the Milky Way gates, Pegasus gates are depicted with 36 symbols. 7 symbols are still required to dial an interplanetary address, adhering to the same constraints as a Milky Way gate. With 36 symbols, the Stargate Network in the Pegasus Galaxy has:

35×34×33×32×31×30/(1×2×3×4×5×6) = 1,168,675,200 possible addresses.

8-symbol addresses will yield:

35×34×33×32×31×30×29/(1×2×3×4×5×6×7) = 33,891,580,800 possible addresses.

If a 9-symbol address operates like 8-symbol addresses it will yield:

35×34×33×32×31×30×29×28/(1×2×3×4×5×6×7×8) = 948,964,262,400 possible addresses.

Thus there are fewer possible addresses in the Pegasus Galaxy, although it may still be the case that there are more Stargates there if more of the possible addresses are utilized than in the Milky Way.

In a departure from the definitive "anywhere to anywhere" ethos of SG-1, the only Stargate in the Pegasus galaxy capable of reaching Stargates in the Milky Way is the one located at Atlantis.[36] This is due to a special "control crystal" unique to the Atlantis DHD, without which a Pegasus Stargate cannot encode its eighth chevron.[36] Unlike any other known gates, the Atlantis Gate can also identify the point of origin of the gate that tries to dial in, and can block an incoming wormhole.[36]

An orbital Stargate in the Pegasus Galaxy

Some Pegasus Stargates are orbital: they lead to open space, something never seen in the Milky Way. This is again a departure from the "personal travel" rather than "starship travel" ethos of SG-1, as these gates are used solely for space-faring vessels and never for humans. It is possible that the Ancients created these gates for localized travel to worlds where ground-based gate travel would be hazardous, either due to climate or atmospheric difficulties or due to native creatures. Orbital gates are depicted without a DHD, being powered by three power nodes spaced equally along the outer ring (see image). In the show, Puddle Jumper vessels have built-in DHDs to explain how a craft would return through an orbital gate.

In "Irresistible",[37] a plan was put in place to create a bridge of linked Stargates in the void between the Milky Way and Pegasus galaxies to circumvent the need for a ZPM to effect travel between Atlantis and Earth (see McKay-Carter Intergalactic Gate Bridge below).

One concept directly ported from SG-1 to Atlantis, and that was the idea of an "Iris" that allows wormholes to form but stops anything trying to emerge.[17] The Atlantis Stargate has a force field that serves the same function. As with SG-1, only the protagonists' gate has this capability, being the singular real defense they have against major attacks (thus allowing the shows to continue despite having insuperable enemies).

Symbols at Atlantis

The symbols depicted on the Atlantis gate again correspond to constellations, although in this case the constellations are fictional. The Atlantis glyphs do have names as was seen during a shot of McKay's laptop in the episode "Sateda" but most of their names are currently unknown.

Position Glyph Constellation Position Glyph Constellation Position Glyph Constellation
1 13 25
2 14 26
3 15 Ecrumio 27
4 16 28
5 17 29
6 Arami 18 Alura 30
7 19 Sub (point of origin for Atlantis) 31
8 20 Salma 32
9 21 33
10 22 34
11 23 35
12 24 36

As with SG-1, this origin symbol is unique to the Stargate at Atlantis, and other Stargates have their own unique origin symbols as well.

Other Stargate Variants

Ori "Supergates"

File:Supergate.jpg
An Ori "Supergate".

In the ninth season of Stargate SG-1, the Ori were introduced as a new main enemy for the show. They come from an entirely new galaxy, and are described as being masters of technology and Wormhole Physics equal to the original gate-builders. While it is not known what the Stargates in the Ori galaxy look like, their presence is implied by the fact that the Ori were able to send Priors (religious messengers) to the Milky Way through a Stargate. The only clue as to their design is that the transport rings used in their galaxy are white and pearly, suggesting by analogy that their Stargates are of this design as well.

On two occasions in the plot of Season 9,[34][16] they attempted to create an enormous Stargate 300 to 400 metres in diameter, which was made of individual modules which were passed through a standard Stargate, presumably from the Ori galaxy. The modules formed the ring of what the character Samantha Carter called a "Supergate". These gates lack an inner track and are instead dialed by preprogrammed data crystals inserted into a panel on the side. Carter hypothesized that by tapping the power in a black hole, a Supergate connection could be permanent.[16] This was later confirmed in the episode The Pegasus Project. A standard gate was dialed from the Pegasus Galaxy to another placed in proximity to the Supergate. The Pegasus gate was then placed near a black hole, and then had a series of nuclear devices detonated at its event horizon. This resulted in the wormhole jumping to the Supergate, thus preventing any future use of it by the Ori. The Goa'uld word for the Supergate is Chappa'ko (Cha-Pa-Ko).

Orlin's homemade stargate

File:Mini gate.jpg
Orlin's makeshift Stargate.

On the Stargate SG-1 episode "Ascension," the outcast Ancient Orlin built a miniature Stargate in Samantha Carter's basement. Its components included 100 pounds of pure raw titanium, 200 feet of fiber optic cable, seven 100,000 watt industrial strength capacitors, and a toaster. This gate was hooked up to the main power supply of the house and only connected once, to Velona, before it burnt out. It has been mentioned once since, in the ninth season episode "The Fourth Horseman."

Tollan Stargate

The Tollan were an extremely advanced human civilization. Among their most impressive technological accomplishments was the construction of a new Stargate.

With the destruction of the original Tollan homeworld, the Tollans' Stargate was lost. Their new homeworld, Tollana, had no original Stargate, and with the assistance of the Nox, a new gate was built.

The Tollan gate was smaller and slimmer than the Ancient's Stargates, and has a pale white color. However, it seems to lack a DHD, or even an inner track for manual dialing, suggesting more advanced remote dialing. Jack O'Neill sarcastically criticized the Tollan Stargate, saying "Ours is bigger". ("Pretense")

Eventually the Tollan Stargate was destroyed by the Goa'uld, as reported by Narim to the SGC. ("Between Two Fires")

McKay-Carter Intergalactic Gate Bridge

During the third season of Stargate Atlantis, a project to place a chain of Stargates in the void between the Milky Way and Pegasus galaxies was initiated, to allow rapid transit between Atlantis and the SGC without the need of a ZPM to power the Stargate.[37] At the time, only the Atlantis gate had a ZPM available, meaning that the return trip from Earth required a three-week journey in a hyperspace-capable Daedalus-class battlecruiser. To this end, Stargates were "harvested" from the surface or orbit of uninhabited planets and deposited accordingly on both ends. When Atlantis' ZPM was depleted,[38] the project took on an added urgency and was made operational shortly afterward.

File:Midway station (The Return).jpg
The Midway Space Station, between galaxies.

The McKay-Carter Intergalactic Gate Bridge (named as such by its co-creator Rodney McKay, recognizing Samantha Carter for the original idea) consists of seventeen Stargates from the Pegasus network and another seventeen from the Milky Way network. A macro program written by McKay and uploaded to the gates' operating systems before dialing causes them to store incoming matter in their buffers, forwarding travelers from one gate to the next along the bridge, rather than emerging from the gate that is initially dialed.

Travelers will then exit at the Midway Space Station, halfway between galaxies, which serves as a transfer point. There, they will then use the other gate network (and a second macro program designed for that network) to continue on to their ultimate destination: travelers from Atlantis would use a Milky Way gate to travel on to Earth and similarly, travelers from Earth would use a Pegasus gate to travel to Atlantis. Even with this, the travel time between galaxies is just slightly over thirty minutes, making it far more efficient than traveling by hyperdrive.

When the first test of the gate bridge was conducted, only the framework of the station had been completed, so a Puddle Jumper was used. The test was a complete success, and the bridge was declared operational. It was later revealed that, since the last gate in the bridge must dial the exit gate, normally either Atlantis or Earth, the macro can be rewritten to dial a different exit gate in the destination galaxy.[39]

Asuran Satellite Weapon

Template:Spoiler

File:Stargatesatellite.png
Four images of the Asurans' satellite showing the orbiting gate inactive (top left-right), active (bottom left), and firing an intense red energy beam.

The Asurans had developed an eight-chevron variant of a Stargate that was created as a satellite weapon. Its components included a shield generator, sensors and a hyperdrive allowing it to orbit its intended target. Once this is accomplished, a wormhole would be activated after which an intense red energy beam reaches out and strikes the target which, in this case, was the city of Atlantis. The beam would originate from an Asuran stronghold which would both power the satellites defenses as well as maintain an ongoing wormhole. This had the added effect of preventing stargate travel as long as the satellite weapon maintained the connection. It appeared as a satellite with a stargate in the center of its form which allowed it to manevuer and, thus, direct the energy weapon.[40] Template:Endspoiler

Making of the props

Two full Stargate props were originally built for the SG-1 pilot Template:Sgcite, the second of which was reconstructed from the prop used in the film. They are made of steel and fiberglass, and are 22 feet in diameter. The second prop is less detailed, and is used for exterior scenes; in the pilot it was used solely on the planet Chulak. The primary one, however, is quite sophisticated. It is fully automated, and capable of rotating and emitting light. This is achieved by the use of a specially-designed 22-foot circular gear, which turns the inner ring on a precise pinion drive wheel, using an eight horsepower electric motor. The top seven chevrons emit laser pulses which are read by a sensor fed into a computer responsible for the gate's movement, which is consequently able to start and stop the rotation very quickly. This main prop is kept almost immovably at the permanent set of the SGC, at Bridge Studios, Vancouver.[41]

File:Iris prop.jpg
The Iris prop

There are further Stargate props which are no more than two-dimensional or semi-three-dimensional (jar-lid shaped) Stargates, being more lightweight and easier to erect on location. These are always filmed front-on to preserve the illusion. If a shot involves the Iris, this is added in post-production, as the mechanics of it opening and closing would be very difficult to build. However, when a Stargate is filmed with just a closed Iris (i.e. without it moving), a tangible prop is inserted into place.

File:Stargate greenscreen.jpg
Stargate prop with rear greenscreen

The visual effects for Stargate SG-1 and Stargate Atlantis are predominantly produced by Rainmaker Digital Effects, a notable visual-effects studio. However, some effects, including the entire Ori battle sequence in the episode Template:Sgcite, were done "in-house".[42] The "kawoosh" effect, both in the film and series, on account of being "difficult to achieve" was generated only once and recorded from various angles; this recording is the same used for all "kawoosh" shots.[41] Rather than being a jet of water, it is actually the image of high-pressure air being blasted into a tank of water. The effect was achieved by mounting a jet airplane engine two feet above a water tank, and using its 180 mph windstream to create the sufficient water displacement. In post production, the surrounding water was removed with computer editing, and the image of the air-jet pasted into the center of the opening Stargate. This technique was only used for earlier episodes, and the effect was replicated digitally soon after to allow more flexibility in shots.

To cut down on costs, the opening of a Stargate is often just implied rather than shown, by a costless sound-effect followed by distinct lighting effects characteristic of light shining through water (as the event horizon is depicted). The DVD commentary for Stargate SG-1 explains that these effects are produced by reflecting light off a large sheet of aluminium.

The Stargate itself is nearly always filmed against a blue or green backdrop, not only making it easier to paste the "kawoosh" imagery onto the scene, but also facilitating the superimposition of the "event horizon ripple effect", which is entirely computer-generated. On occasion, the Stargate itself is also completely swapped out for a computer generated model, usually in cases where it is being moved, or is depicted in space. Series producer Robert C. Cooper explained that it often costs a lot to erect a Stargate on location, and so in some cases offworld gates are also entirely a visual effect.[43]

Other uses of the concept

The basic concept of a Stargate did not originate with the movie Stargate. Arthur C. Clarke first coined the term "Star Gate" in his novel 2001: A Space Odyssey (1968) as a fictional device allowing rapid travel between distant locations. Clarke’s "Star Gate" does not resemble the one described in this article; nevertheless, Stargate SG-1 paid homage to Clarke in the two episodes "2001" and "2010," which correspond to the first two books in his Space Odyssey series: 2001: A Space Odyssey and 2010: Odyssey Two.

Since the introduction of the Stargate on the big screen other authors have referenced the Stargate device. Authors Lynn Picknett and Clive Prince also write of "The Stargate Conspiracy: The Truth About Extraterrestrial Life and the Mysteries of Ancient Egypt." The book details an alternative theory which ingrains the term Stargate with Egypt's past: either the pyramid itself is a gateway to the stars (because of the shafts pointing to a star) or the building of Heaven on Earth based on geographical location of the great and outlying pyramids (see: Orion).

The TV show Buck Rogers had devices called 'Stargates', however, they aided in interstellar travel. They were more similar to Jumpgates from the TV show Babylon 5.

The computer game Galactic Civilizations II: Dread Lords mentions the use of Stargates as a means of travel between the stars for space ships. The stargates became obsolete when humans invented Hyperdrive.

In the cartoon series Legion of Superheroes, episode 7 features a platform full of devices which seem to be Stargates, each going to a different world. In this show, they are referred to only as 'gates'.

Differences between Stargates

File:Stargate7thchevron.jpg
The seventh chevron in the film.

There are many differences between the film's Stargate and the Stargate in SG-1.

  • The chevrons in the Stargate film do not glow as they do in the series.
  • The top chevron on the film's Stargate is different aesthetically than the rest of its chevrons.[44] In SG-1, all the chevrons on a stargate are visually identical.
  • In the film, to "lock" in a Stargate symbol, each chevron "pops" or "clamps" the symbol in question to dial it. In SG-1, only the top chevron "pops" when dialing an address, while the other chevrons merely light up and do not clamp.
  • In the film, the symbols on the gate are engraved into the surface of the Stargate. In the television series, the symbols protrude from its surface.
  • In the movie, each stargate has a unique set of 39 symbols, but in the series, each gate has the same 38 symbols (Earth's symbols based on Earth's constellations), minus a single point of origin symbol that is unique to that individual gate.
  • In the film, the Stargate is easily capable of intergalactic dialing, as evidenced by the fact that the planet Abydos was in a completely different galaxy. In SG-1, Stargate networks are limited to their specific galaxy, unless a tremendous amount of power is used.

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f Stargate (1994) | Producer comments Cite error: The named reference "film" was defined multiple times with different content (see the help page).
  2. ^ a b c "Differences between Stargate and SG-1". Note sub-entry on differences between the stargates themselves. Cite error: The named reference "officialsite" was defined multiple times with different content (see the help page).
  3. ^ a b c "Redemption". Stargate SG-1. {{cite episode}}: Unknown parameter |episodelink= ignored (|episode-link= suggested) (help); Unknown parameter |serieslink= ignored (|series-link= suggested) (help) | Screenplay Part 1, Screenplay Part 2
  4. ^ a b "The First Commandment". Stargate SG-1. {{cite episode}}: Unknown parameter |episodelink= ignored (|episode-link= suggested) (help); Unknown parameter |serieslink= ignored (|series-link= suggested) (help) | Screenplay
  5. ^ "Memento". Stargate SG-1. {{cite episode}}: Unknown parameter |episodelink= ignored (|episode-link= suggested) (help); Unknown parameter |serieslink= ignored (|series-link= suggested) (help) | Screenplay
  6. ^ "Demons". Stargate SG-1. {{cite episode}}: Unknown parameter |episodelink= ignored (|episode-link= suggested) (help); Unknown parameter |serieslink= ignored (|series-link= suggested) (help) | Screenplay
  7. ^ "Stargate trivia from IMDb".
  8. ^ Nandi, Kamal K. and Zhang, Yuan-Zhong. "A Quantum Constraint for the Physical Viability of Classical Traversable Lorentzian Wormholes". arXiv eprint server. Retrieved August 12. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |accessdate= (help); Unknown parameter |accessyear= ignored (|access-date= suggested) (help)CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  9. ^ Bunn, Ted. "Black Holes FAQ (Frequently Asked Questions) List". Retrieved 2006-03-25.
  10. ^ a b c d e f g "Children of the Gods". Stargate SG-1. {{cite episode}}: Unknown parameter |episodelink= ignored (|episode-link= suggested) (help); Unknown parameter |serieslink= ignored (|series-link= suggested) (help) | Screenplay
  11. ^ a b c d e "The Torment of Tantalus". Stargate SG-1. {{cite episode}}: Unknown parameter |episodelink= ignored (|episode-link= suggested) (help); Unknown parameter |serieslink= ignored (|series-link= suggested) (help) | Screenplay
  12. ^ "Avenger 2.0". Stargate SG-1. {{cite episode}}: Unknown parameter |episodelink= ignored (|episode-link= suggested) (help); Unknown parameter |serieslink= ignored (|series-link= suggested) (help) | Screenplay. "seven symbols chosen from a pool of 38 non-repeating candidates, that's about 63 billion possible combinations."
  13. ^ a b "Chevron 7, locked"; multiple episodes including the original film.
  14. ^ a b "The Fifth Race". Stargate SG-1. {{cite episode}}: Unknown parameter |episodelink= ignored (|episode-link= suggested) (help); Unknown parameter |serieslink= ignored (|series-link= suggested) (help) | Screenplay
  15. ^ "Letters from Pegasus". Stargate Atlantis. {{cite episode}}: Unknown parameter |episodelink= ignored (|episode-link= suggested) (help); Unknown parameter |serieslink= ignored (|series-link= suggested) (help)
  16. ^ a b c "Camelot". Stargate SG-1. {{cite episode}}: Unknown parameter |episodelink= ignored (|episode-link= suggested) (help); Unknown parameter |serieslink= ignored (|series-link= suggested) (help) | Screenplay
  17. ^ a b "Rising". Stargate Atlantis. {{cite episode}}: Unknown parameter |episodelink= ignored (|episode-link= suggested) (help); Unknown parameter |serieslink= ignored (|series-link= suggested) (help)
  18. ^ Andy Mikita, Stargate SG-1 Co-Producer
  19. ^ "The Scourge". Stargate SG-1. {{cite episode}}: Unknown parameter |episodelink= ignored (|episode-link= suggested) (help); Unknown parameter |serieslink= ignored (|series-link= suggested) (help) | Screenplay (for example)
  20. ^ a b c "Solitudes". Stargate SG-1. {{cite episode}}: Unknown parameter |episodelink= ignored (|episode-link= suggested) (help); Unknown parameter |serieslink= ignored (|series-link= suggested) (help) | Screenplay
  21. ^ a b "Home". Stargate Atlantis. {{cite episode}}: Unknown parameter |episodelink= ignored (|episode-link= suggested) (help); Unknown parameter |serieslink= ignored (|series-link= suggested) (help) | Transcript Cite error: The named reference "Home" was defined multiple times with different content (see the help page).
  22. ^ a b "A Hundred Days". Stargate SG-1. {{cite episode}}: Unknown parameter |episodelink= ignored (|episode-link= suggested) (help); Unknown parameter |serieslink= ignored (|series-link= suggested) (help) | Screenplay
  23. ^ "New Ground". Stargate SG-1. {{cite episode}}: Unknown parameter |episodelink= ignored (|episode-link= suggested) (help); Unknown parameter |serieslink= ignored (|series-link= suggested) (help)
  24. ^ "Shades of Grey". Stargate SG-1. {{cite episode}}: Unknown parameter |episodelink= ignored (|episode-link= suggested) (help); Unknown parameter |serieslink= ignored (|series-link= suggested) (help) | Screenplay (at roughly 27mins)
  25. ^ a b c "A Matter of Time". Stargate SG-1. {{cite episode}}: Unknown parameter |episodelink= ignored (|episode-link= suggested) (help); Unknown parameter |serieslink= ignored (|series-link= suggested) (help) | Screenplay
  26. ^ a b c d "Thirty-Eight Minutes". Stargate Atlantis. {{cite episode}}: Unknown parameter |episodelink= ignored (|episode-link= suggested) (help); Unknown parameter |serieslink= ignored (|series-link= suggested) (help)
  27. ^ a b "The Enemy Within". Stargate SG-1. {{cite episode}}: Unknown parameter |episodelink= ignored (|episode-link= suggested) (help); Unknown parameter |serieslink= ignored (|series-link= suggested) (help) | Screenplay
  28. ^ "48 Hours". Stargate SG-1. {{cite episode}}: Unknown parameter |episodelink= ignored (|episode-link= suggested) (help); Unknown parameter |serieslink= ignored (|series-link= suggested) (help) | Screenplay
  29. ^ a b c d "Watergate". Stargate SG-1. {{cite episode}}: Unknown parameter |episodelink= ignored (|episode-link= suggested) (help); Unknown parameter |serieslink= ignored (|series-link= suggested) (help) | Screenplay
  30. ^ "Prisoners". Stargate SG-1. {{cite episode}}: Unknown parameter |episodelink= ignored (|episode-link= suggested) (help); Unknown parameter |serieslink= ignored (|series-link= suggested) (help) | Screenplay
  31. ^ a b "Frozen". Stargate SG-1. {{cite episode}}: Unknown parameter |episodelink= ignored (|episode-link= suggested) (help); Unknown parameter |serieslink= ignored (|series-link= suggested) (help) | Screenplay
  32. ^ "Exodus". Stargate SG-1. {{cite episode}}: Unknown parameter |episodelink= ignored (|episode-link= suggested) (help); Unknown parameter |serieslink= ignored (|series-link= suggested) (help) | Screenplay
  33. ^ "Full Circle". Stargate SG-1. {{cite episode}}: Unknown parameter |episodelink= ignored (|episode-link= suggested) (help); Unknown parameter |serieslink= ignored (|series-link= suggested) (help) | Screenplay
  34. ^ a b "Beachhead". Stargate SG-1. {{cite episode}}: Unknown parameter |episodelink= ignored (|episode-link= suggested) (help); Unknown parameter |serieslink= ignored (|series-link= suggested) (help) | Screenplay
  35. ^ "Nemesis". Stargate SG-1. {{cite episode}}: Unknown parameter |episodelink= ignored (|episode-link= suggested) (help); Unknown parameter |serieslink= ignored (|series-link= suggested) (help) | Screenplay
  36. ^ a b c "Before I Sleep". Stargate Atlantis. {{cite episode}}: Unknown parameter |episodelink= ignored (|episode-link= suggested) (help); Unknown parameter |serieslink= ignored (|series-link= suggested) (help)
  37. ^ a b "Irresistible". Stargate Atlantis. {{cite episode}}: Unknown parameter |episodelink= ignored (|episode-link= suggested) (help); Unknown parameter |serieslink= ignored (|series-link= suggested) (help)
  38. ^ "McKay and Mrs. Miller". Stargate Atlantis. {{cite episode}}: Unknown parameter |episodelink= ignored (|episode-link= suggested) (help); Unknown parameter |serieslink= ignored (|series-link= suggested) (help)
  39. ^ "The Return". Stargate Atlantis. {{cite episode}}: Unknown parameter |episodelink= ignored (|episode-link= suggested) (help); Unknown parameter |serieslink= ignored (|series-link= suggested) (help)
  40. ^ "First Strike". Stargate Atlantis. {{cite episode}}: Unknown parameter |episodelink= ignored (|episode-link= suggested) (help); Unknown parameter |serieslink= ignored (|series-link= suggested) (help)
  41. ^ a b "Production notes for Stargate SG-1". Richard Dean Anderson Official Website.
  42. ^ "Interview with Brad Wright". Gateworld.
  43. ^ "Interview with Robert C. Cooper". GateWorld.
  44. ^ http://i2.photobucket.com/albums/y38/Deloravius/StarGate/0003.jpg

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