The Alpha Quadrant is a big place. At our last estimates, it would take a ship weeks to cross from one corner to the next at high warp, and that's just moving between the outermost planets. There are three other quadrants, all of which continue in all directions, infinitely. That's a lot of space, and a lot of planets.
This page has been designed to give you as much information as possible for all of the planets, objects, and anomalies that have been discovered in space. In the lists below, stars are identified by italics. Bold entries indicate a system, star, or planet that has political importance, such as a capitol of a government. Remember: only space objects which have bene discovered will appear in the gallery. There are many other things in space just waiting to be found!
Finally, most systems are named after their parent star. In the case where a system has more than one parent star, the name of the system (which is usually a variant of the most notable star in the system) appears in bright cyan, followed by all of the stars in dim cyan, surrounded by brackets. Clicking on the name of a system always travels to the most important star in that system.
Two three-dimensional, rotating starcharts have been included at the bottom of the page. Click on them to see how each of the governments are arranged in respect to the Nimbus system.
![]() |
![]() |
||||||||||||||||||||||
|
|
||||||||||||||||||||||
![]() |
![]() |
||||||||||||||||||||||
|
|
||||||||||||||||||||||
![]() |
Galactic StarchartsBorders Shapes |
![]() |
||
|
Copyright
© 1999 |
||