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Multiple realities
(covers information from several alternate timelines)
Red Matter Particles

Red matter particles

Red matter was a substance capable of forming a black hole when ignited. One drop was sufficient to collapse a star or consume an entire planet.

History[]

Red matter

Red matter aboard the Jellyfish

In 2387, the Romulan sun went supernova, threatening to destroy Romulus, the Romulan people, and the galaxy. Ambassador Spock piloted what he described as "our fastest ship" equipped with red matter in an effort to create a black hole to absorb the exploding star. Although his plan succeeded and the supernova was eliminated, Spock was too late to save Romulus, which was destroyed.

Subsequent to the creation of the black hole, Spock was confronted in his ship by the Romulan mining vessel Narada, commanded by Nero, who held Spock responsible for the destruction of his homeworld. During the confrontation, both ships were pulled into the black hole and transported back in time through a tunnel in spacetime, the Narada arriving in the year 2233, resulting in the creation of an alternate reality. Upon emerging from the black hole, the Narada encountered the Starfleet vessel USS Kelvin engaged in battle, but was severely damaged when Lieutenant George Kirk rammed the Narada with the Kelvin.

Narada destroyed

The Narada destroyed by a black hole

Twenty-five years later in 2258, in the alternate reality, Spock, who had entered the black hole only seconds after the Narada, emerged, and both he and his ship were captured by Nero. Upon obtaining the red matter aboard Spock's ship, Nero mounted an attack on Vulcan, drilling into the planet and launching a small amount of the red matter into the core, forming a singularity within which consumed the entire planet. Nero later attempted to perform the same action on Earth, but was stopped by the intervention of Spock's alternate reality-counterpart and James T. Kirk. Spock's counterpart was able to appropriate Spock's ship from the Narada, and piloted it on a collision course with the Romulan vessel. When the ship collided, the red matter stored aboard ignited, generating a black hole within the Narada itself, destroying the ship. (Star Trek)

Red Lady results 2

Listed among search results

In 2401, "red matter" was among the search results Raffi Musiker encountered using while working with Starfleet Intelligence to track down stolen quantum tunneling technology and identify the meaning of the "Red Lady". (PIC: "The Next Generation")

Appendices[]

Background information[]

In Star Trek Magazine issue 144, Scott Chambliss, production designer on Star Trek, noted that the appearance of red matter as a "big red ball" was a reference to other productions that he had worked on with J.J. Abrams, including Alias and Mission: Impossible III. [1]

André Bormanis commented: "I didn’t work on the Abrams film, and I’ve only seen it once, when it premiered. I enjoyed it very much, but had trouble understanding the nature of red matter. It struck me more as a convenient plot device than well-thought-out science fiction." [2](X)

Apocrypha[]

According to the Star Trek: Countdown prequel comic book, which details the events leading up to the destruction of Romulus, red matter is an artificial substance created by the Vulcan Science Academy. It is manufactured from decalithium, a rare isotope that the Narada was equipped to mine.

The novelization of Star Trek by Alan Dean Foster states that red matter's destructive properties are magnified by intense heat and pressurization that a star or a planetary core can provide.

The Path to 2409 (β) on the Star Trek Online website states that the Vulcans had created red matter without the consultation or approval of Federation authorities, earning criticism from the board investigating the destruction of Romulus. In response the Vulcans promised to not conduct any more red matter experiments and stated that the entire supply was on Spock's ship when it vanished. Despite this, the game has a device called a "Red Matter Capacitor." This device is equipped to a player's ship and acts as an auxiliary power source.

The 2013 virtual collectible card battle game Star Trek: Rivals has "Decalithium Red Matter" as card #110.

External link[]

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