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Star Trek: Voyager - Episode Guide - Season 7

Aside from the clear awareness on the part of the Star Trek: Voyager production team, what’s markedly different about season 7? The special effects, easily better and more gorgeous than any Star Trek iteration going into Discovery. Check out Voyager trawling the remnants of a destroyed Borg cube in “Imperfection” or nearly any exterior in “Inside Man” – here Voyager signals that this show has brought the franchise a long way from The Original Series.

The strengths of Voyager season 7 are hardly limited to looks, however. Despite a last-ditch attempt to foster an interpersonal relationship between Seven and Chakotay that features the least chemistry of any Star Trek couple since... well, since Neelix and Kes, really.

1. Unimatrix Zero, Part II – Apparently, Janeway, B’Elanna and Tuvok are able to stay cool and individual despite apparent assimilation because of magic drugs – until, oddly, Tuvok loses it temporarily. Naturally, everything else goes swimmingly accord to plan and dreams may somehow defeat the wussified Borg. **

2. Imperfection – Seven’s cortical implant begins to break down, thereby triggering a quick demise for the former drone. Until a possible donor steps forth… ***

3. Drive – In a very exciting and sadly underdeveloped idea, Paris gets wind of a local starcraft race and enters the Delta Flyer. With the buildup within the episode about as palpable as that within the show, how come this script doesn’t get to the race more quickly and why didn’t the director show us more? ***

4. Repression – A few Maquis Red Shirts are killed or apparently assaulted. Chakotay likewise goes into a coma (or so we’re told; sometimes it’s very difficult to tell). Tuvok and the Doctor take excruciatingly long to figure out what’s going on. **

5. Critical Care – The EMH as anarchist: A scammer steals Voyager’s EMH and sells him to a nearby hospital on an alien world which some twisted economic beliefs Satire, suspense, hospital-based drama, lots of Robert Picardo... what more do you want? ****

6. Inside Man – If you have managed to heretofore avoid synopses of this episode and are thus blissfully spoiler-free, you’ll dig on this one all the more. Here’s what we can tell you: A hologram of the indomitable Reg Barclay is transmitted to Voyager; the Barclay hologram is to help modify Voyager (with the latest in Starfleet™ technology!) so as to immediately get the ship back into the Delta Quadrant. Seven quickly becomes suspicious of the proposed technology involved in Reg’s plan; the twists and intriguing reveals snowball thereafter. ****

7. Body and Soul – On an away mission, Harry Kim, Seven and the Doctor are captured (imagine that), and the Doctor takes refuge “inside” Seven’s circuitry, thereby triggering the Brain Uploading trope . And for much of the episode, Jeri Ryan just kills it as EMH-inhabiting-Seven – very funny stuff. ****

8. Nightingale – Kim comes to the aid of a ship whose entire command crew has been wiped out; naturally all is Not As It Seems. The plot twists here are not quite enough to detract from the very predictable “Captain Kim” storyline. Plus, Neelix gets annoyingly shoehorned in here at an even greater level of toxicity than usual. ***

9-10. Flesh and Blood, Parts I and II – The Hirogen’s use of hologram technology has resulted in holographic prey capable of turning the tables on the hunters. The Doctor sympathizes with their plight and assists on their mission to find a new world to colonize, while Janeway must deal with the consequences of (let’s face it) another shaky decision. An okay story is well too stretched, and is anyone really buying the Doctor leaving Voyager? Also, what is up with B’Elanna’s continued racism (speciesism?) toward *holographic* Cardassians? ***

11. Shattered – Head trip for Chakotay … or it would be, if this character had the depth to freak out. Instead, when he finds himself in different time periods as he moves about Voyager, it’s an easily sussed non-problem. Interesting enough stuff for a bit of a “greatest hits” episode, and the pseudo-dream team earlier Janeway and current Chakotay assemble is fun. ****

12. Lineage – After this episode, can we finally acknowledge the dangerous stupidity that is B’Elanna Torres’s self-loathing? After finding out that she is pregnant, B’Elanna becomes obsessed with eradicating all traces of Klingon DNA from her unborn daughter. And just to prove this goes well beyond hormonal imbalance due to pregnancy, she psychotically reprograms the EMH to agree with her genetic manipulation plan. All this goes back to an ostensible childhood trauma that, while sad, hardly justifies the sudden wrought plea of victimization. Awful, just awful. 0

13. Repentance – A group of guards and prisoners are rescued from a crippled prison ship and are subsequently uneasily housed on Voyager. And then the Doctor discovers that at least one may be cured of his psychotic tendencies… ***

14. Prophecy – O, those kooky Klingons! Voyager happens upon a Klingon cruiser that has traveled for 70 years on a mission to find an afore-destined spiritual leader and/or a new homeworld. When said Klingons discover the presence of B’Elanna – a pregnant B’Elanna, no less – aboard Voyager, well, that’s clearly a sign and/or omen, right? ***

15. The Void – As in “Night,” Voyager enters an apparently boundless void. Unlike that other classic Voyager-in-emptiness story, however, Neelix does not lose his marbles, nor does Janeway get all pouty/depressed. Instead, Janeway manages to band together with various other ships who’ve also been sucked into the void. A decently paced story that defies its Beckettesque surroundings. ***

16. Workforce, Part I – Head trip for the audience: The WTFs come early and often, as Janeway, Tuvok, Paris, B’Elanna and Seven all occupy jobs in a blue-collar manufacturing district. Meanwhile, Chakotay, Kim and Neelix returned to find an empty ship piloted by the Emergency Command Hologram. (Yes!) ***

17. Workforce, Part II – Chakotay and Neelix pose as (un-brainwashed) workers to infiltrate the plant floor, and ultimately the fairly easily guessable antagonist’s motivation is revealed. (Sudden thoughts: When the entire Voyager crew was rounded up, did they get Naomi Wildman, too? Did they put her to work as well? Come to think of it, where the hell has Miss Wildman been for the past 1½ seasons, anyway?) ***

18. Human Error – What does Seven do on the Holodeck? Incredibly, she imagines everyday scenarios with crew members. Unfortunately, a dinner date with holographic Chakotay almost kills her. Also, Icheb comes around to drop a few quotes from classic thinkers. **

19. Q2 – Remember when Q wanted to, likesay, get with janeway to perpetuate the species and/or create a new leader for the Continuum? Well, the son he later had with another Q is her approximated as a human teen. Naturally, Q is all to willing to ditch junior with Janeway and the crew. Though the lad’s treachery is predictable, the plot machinations thereafter keep things interesting. And a decent enough sendoff for Q. ***

20. Author, Author – Yet another clever use of the holodeck by the Voyager folks which unfortunately shifts into an inexplicable “Measure of a Man” redux with the Doctor in the Data role and Tuvok serving as Picard. **** for the first half featuring the Doctor’s purple “prose” and Paris’s ingenious response; ** for the unsatisfying legal argument that’s founded in the Doctor suddenly acting oppressed and bitchy. Overall, then it’s a ***.

21. Friendship One – Tracking a 21st-century unmanned craft now in the Delta Quadrant leaders Voyager to a planet whose citizens blame Earth for their own destructive folly. ***

22. Natural Law – Chakotay and Seven crash land a shuttle (imagine that) nearby a group of Stone Age people. In the much more watchable subplot, Paris is busted for an orbital traffic violation in the Delta Flyer and is given a penalty of mandatory piloting lessons. Again, a split rating gets this episode a ***.

23. Homestead – Neelix departs Voyager about 168 episodes too late when a colony of Talaxians is found, and he decides to stay on with his compatriots. And o, hey, Naomi Wildman sighting! ***

24. Renaissance Man – Another straightforward, fast-moving script as aliens manipulate the Doctor into posing as various members of the crew as a means to stealing Voyager’s warp core technology. ***

25-26. Endgame – Like the great majority of the Star Trek: Voyager series throughout its run, the ending of it all is so very muted, the stakes set lower and the victory smaller. Set some 10 years after Voyager’s return to Earth, 33 years after its diverted maiden voyage, Admiral Janeway conceives of a way to change the past and return the ship home 26 years more quickly (and also nullify Noami Wildman’s daughter’s existence, apparently). At least we get a penultimate dalliance with the Borg – and resolution, rushed though it is. ***

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Star Trek: Voyager - Season 7

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Capt. Janeway leads the Voyager in a fight against the Borg, delves into political infighting, escapes a void and finally makes her way back home.

20 Episodes

S7 e1 - unimatrix zero (2), s7 e2 - imperfection, s7 e3 - drive, s7 e4 - repression, s7 e5 - critical care, s7 e6 - inside man, s7 e7 - body and soul, s7 e8 - nightingale, s7 e9 - flesh and blood (1), s7 e10 - flesh and blood (2), s7 e11 - shattered, s7 e12 - lineage, s7 e13 - repentance, s7 e14 - prophecy, s7 e15 - the void, s7 e16 - workforce (1), s7 e17 - workforce (2), s7 e18 - human error, s7 e19 - season 7, s7 e20 - author, author, where does star trek: voyager rank today the justwatch daily streaming charts are calculated by user activity within the last 24 hours. this includes clicking on a streaming offer, adding a title to a watchlist, and marking a title as 'seen'. this includes data from ~1.3 million movie & tv show fans per day..

Streaming charts last updated: 9:16:00 AM, 03/18/2024

Star Trek: Voyager is 1178 on the JustWatch Daily Streaming Charts today. The TV show has moved down the charts by -33 places since yesterday. In the United States, it is currently more popular than Woman but less popular than Re:␣Hamatora.

Streaming Charts The JustWatch Daily Streaming Charts are calculated by user activity within the last 24 hours. This includes clicking on a streaming offer, adding a title to a watchlist, and marking a title as 'seen'. This includes data from ~1.3 million movie & TV show fans per day.

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Screen Rant

Best star trek: voyager episode from each of the show's 7 seasons.

Standout episodes show the best of Captain Janeway and the USS Voyager crew throughout each of Star Trek: Voyager's 7 seasons in the Delta Quadrant.

  • Captain Janeway faced unique challenges in the Delta Quadrant with compassion, connection, and tough decisions.
  • Season 4 introduced Seven of Nine, enhancing Voyager's story with complex characters and fresh dynamics.
  • Voyager's best episodes showcased moral dilemmas, character development, and alliances with new alien species.

The best episodes from each of Star Trek: Voyager 's seven seasons represent the unique challenges faced by Captain Kathryn Janeway (Kate Mulgrew) and the USS Voyager crew as the only Starfleet vessel in the Delta Quadrant. Compassion and connection were part of Voyager 's story from the jump , as a diminished Starfleet crew needed to join forces with Commander Chakotay's (Robert Beltran) Maquis crew in order to survive in a far-flung corner of the galaxy, populated with brand-new Star Trek aliens, like Talaxian chef Neelix (Ethan Phillips) and psychic Ocampa Kes (Jennifer Lien). Each week, Voyager encountered new moral dilemmas unique to the Delta Quadrant, but unmistakably Star Trek in nature.

Beginning in Star Trek: Voyager season 4, ex-Borg drone Seven of Nine (Jeri Ryan) reinvigorated the series , bringing not just sex appeal but also a complex, intelligent character who clashed with Captain Janeway's staunch Federation ideals. Seven and Voyager's holographic Doctor (Robert Picardo) were breakout stars, changing Voyager for the better, especially when paired as a comedic duo of unlikely friends. Star Trek: Voyager became stronger with story arcs featuring the Borg, the predatory Hirogen, and the USS Voyager's contact with the Alpha Quadrant. To review the very best of Star Trek: Voyager , however, we must start from the beginning.

Best Star Trek: Voyager Episode Of Each Main Character

7 star trek: voyager season 1's best - episode 7, "eye of the needle", "just our luck, we raise one ship from the alpha quadrant and it has to be romulan.".

Despite its tenuous footing, Star Trek: Voyager season 1 delivers a memorable episode that offers the USS Voyager crew an early chance to connect to the Alpha Quadrant when Ensign Harry Kim (Garrett Wang) discovers a new wormhole ... but the wormhole is only 30 centimeters wide. That's big enough for a communications signal, but there's a question of whether Telek R'Mor (Vaughn Armstrong), the Romulan scientist on the other side, is willing to deliver Voyager's message to Starfleet. The tenuous trust built on Janeway's desperation and R'Mor's curiosity is quintessential Star Trek , and the devastating final twist seals "Eye of the Needle" as Voyager season 1's best episode.

Honorable Mention: Star Trek: Voyager season 1, episode 15, "Jetrel"

6 Star Trek: Voyager Season 2's Best - Episode 24, "Tuvix"

"i don't want to die.".

There is no greater dilemma in Star Trek: Voyager than the one in "Tuvix", which remains a hot debate nearly 30 years later. When symbiogenetic orchid samples muddle their transporter patterns, Neelix and Lt. Tuvok (Tim Russ) are merged into a single being known as Tuvix (Tom Wright), who becomes beloved by most of Voyager's crew over several weeks. That makes it all the more difficult when the Doctor figures out how to bring Tuvok and Neelix back, but at the expense of Tuvix. Janeway's Tuvix decision is hard to watch, since there's no correct or easy answer no matter how you look at it, especially after the gut-wrenching pain of watching Tuvix plead for his continued existence.

Honorable Mention: Star Trek: Voyager season 2, episode 21, "Deadlock"

Star Trek: Lower Decks season 4, episode 1 "Twovix" lampoons the Tuvix dilemma with Voyager references aplenty, highlighting the strength of "Tuvix" to stand the test of time.

5 Star Trek: Voyager Season 3's Best - Episode 26, "Scorpion, Part 1"

"'i couldn't help it,' said the scorpion, 'it's my nature'.".

Faced with the choice of settling down in the Delta Quadrant or forging ahead through Borg space, Captain Janeway decides to safeguard against the perils of the latter by allying with the Borg, even though Commander Chakotay is all but certain that the Borg will renege on their end of the agreement, as the eponymous scorpion. Janeway's third option isn't an easy one, but taking the deal proves just how determined Kathryn Janeway is to see her people home at any cost. The tense cliffhanger resolves at the start of Star Trek: Voyager season 4, kicking off the rivalry between Janeway and the Borg, and famously introducing Seven of Nine.

Honorable Mention: Star Trek: Voyager season 3, episode 22, "Real Life"

4 Star Trek: Voyager Season 4's Best - Episode 8 & 9 "Year of Hell"

"he's trying to erase us from history.".

Originally conceived as the backdrop for the entire season 4 of Star Trek: Voyager , "Year of Hell" pits the USS Voyager against Annorax of the Krenim Imperium (Kurtwood Smith), a dictator obsessed with restoring the glory of his former empire through temporal warfare. The Krenim are a formidable opponent with unique technologies essential to the central sci-fi conceit, but in the end, the strength of this war story is its focus on character psychology. The year-long cat and mouse game tests the tenacity of both major players, with Annorax and Captain Janeway evenly matched in their sheer determination, right until the very end reveals which of them is willing to risk more and win.

Honorable Mention: Star Trek: Voyager season 4, episode 23, "Living Witness"

10 Ways USS Voyager Changed In Star Trek’s Delta Quadrant

3 star trek: voyager season 5's best - episode 11, "latent image", "as difficult as it is to accept, the doctor is more like that replicator than he is like us.".

A slowly unraveling mystery reveals that the Doctor's program has been tampered with, and it's up to him to figure out not only who altered his memories, but why. The unsettling psychological puzzle falls into place bit by bit, raising questions about medical ethics, personal autonomy, and the true nature of the Doctor as a sentient hologram with an evolving program. "Latent Image" is a turning point in the Doctor's character arc , as the hard truth that emerges bends the Doctor's perception of himself towards greater compassion, and also affects how Captain Janeway, Seven of Nine, and the rest of Voyager's crew perceive the Doctor moving forward.

Honorable Mention: Star Trek: Voyager season 5, episode 10 "Counterpoint"

2 Star Trek: Voyager Season 6's Best - Episode 12 "Blink of an Eye"

"how does this sound 'the weird planet where time moved very fast and so did the people who lived there,' by naomi wildman…".

The USS Voyager is stuck in orbit of an unnamed planet where time moves far more quickly relative to the rest of the universe. The crew is able to watch civilizations rise and fall at an accelerated rate, as the culture on the planet is heavily influenced by Voyager's presence for thousands of years -- but mere weeks to Voyager's crew. "Blink of an Eye" is a new angle on a Prime Directive story that centers the aliens affected by the "Skyship" , with a nod to how science fiction, and Star Trek in particular, shapes our own culture by inspiring us to reach for the stars.

Honorable Mention: Star Trek: Voyager season 6, episode 4, "Tinker Tenor Doctor Spy"

1 Star Trek: Voyager Season 7's Best - Episode 25 & 26 "Endgame"

"set a course… for home.".

Star Trek: Voyager season 7 is rife with solid episodes, but it's the finale that takes the honor of being the season's best. "Endgame" opens on the USS Voyager's return to Earth after decades of harrowing adventures, in which the crew faces devastating losses. With a new plan, Admiral Janeway ensures those losses never happen, comes home early, and deals with the looming Borg threat in one fell swoop , even if she has to break a few rules to do it. Kate Mulgrew's performances as both Captain and Admiral Janeway carry the Star Trek: Voyager finale through time and alternate realities to the series' logical -- and satisfying -- conclusion.

Honorable Mention: Star Trek: Voyager season 7, episode 7, "Body and Soul"

While Star Trek: Voyager never received the same critical acclaim as its predecessors, Star Trek: The Next Generation and Star Trek: Deep Space Nine , the USS Voyager's journey back home to the Alpha Quadrant had significant high points . Throughout seven years, seemingly disparate episodes came together like beads on a string, threaded with themes of love, loss, grief, and family. Voyager's crew grew to care for each other, and often brought out the best in each other despite checkered pasts and uncertain bonds. In the end, it's the characters that made Star Trek: Voyager a comfortable show beloved by its fans, like the home we were looking for all along.

Star Trek: Voyager is streaming on Paramount+.

VOY Season 7

  • View history
  • 3 Background information
  • 4.1 Starring
  • 4.2 Also starring
  • 4.3 Guest and co-stars
  • 5 Media releases
  • 6 External links

Episodes [ ]

Summary [ ].

This was the final season of Star Trek: Voyager .

A multitude of familiar aliens are revisited for a final shout including the Ferengi in " Inside Man ", the Hirogen in " Flesh and Blood ", the Klingons in " Prophecy ", the Hierarchy in " The Void " and " Renaissance Man ", the Q in " Q2 ", and the Talaxians in " Homestead ".

" Drive " sees Tom Paris and B'Elanna Torres pilot the Delta Flyer in a "trans-stellar rally" before finally tying the knot, and in " Body and Soul ", Seven of Nine is forced to hide The Doctor 's program in her cybernetic implant. In " Q2 " John de Lancie returns with his errant son, desperate for the assistance of "Aunt Kathy" which completes the "Q" story arc begun in seasons two and three, and in " Author, Author ", the crew get to play in the holodeck alongside adulterated versions of themselves, when The Doctor publishes his first holonovel to less than stellar reviews.

After marrying in " Drive ", B'Elanna Torres and Tom Paris' relationship, Torres discovers that she is pregnant in " Lineage ", before contending with a group of Klingons convinced she is carrying the Klingon Messiah in " Prophecy ". Ultimately, Torres gives birth at the very moment Voyager bursts into the Alpha Quadrant from inside an exploding Borg sphere in the series finale " Endgame ".

The series finale, "Endgame" was watched by 8.8 million viewers, significantly less than the show's premiere episode, " Caretaker " with 21.3 million viewers. [1] Still, it pulled in the highest ratings since the premiere episode of the fourth season , " Scorpion, Part II ". Referring to "Endgame" as "the right kind of Star Trek programming", UPN President Tom Nunan publicly declared, " The Voyager finale bodes extremely well for Enterprise 's première next fall. " ( Star Trek Monthly  issue 82 , p. 8)

Background information [ ]

  • Brannon Braga steps down as showrunner to spend a year of pre-production on Enterprise , and is replaced for Voyager 's final season by Kenneth Biller .
  • Filming for this season began on 22 June 2000 with " Unimatrix Zero, Part II ". [2] (X)
  • After the series, Janeway was promoted to vice admiral and made a cameo appearance in Star Trek Nemesis .
  • Alice Krige reprised her role of the Borg Queen in the Voyager series finale " Endgame " for the first time since starring in Star Trek: First Contact . All other appearances of the Borg Queen were played by Susanna Thompson .
  • Characters with " crossovers " from other incarnations of Star Trek seen this season: the aforementioned Borg Queen (" Unimatrix Zero, Part II ", " Endgame "); Deanna Troi (" Inside Man "); Reginald Barclay (" Inside Man ", " Author, Author ", and " Endgame "); Q (" Q2 ").

Credits [ ]

Starring [ ].

  • Kate Mulgrew as Captain Kathryn Janeway

Also starring [ ]

  • Robert Beltran as Chakotay
  • Roxann Dawson as B'Elanna Torres
  • Robert Duncan McNeill as Tom Paris
  • Ethan Phillips as Neelix
  • Robert Picardo as The Doctor
  • Tim Russ as Tuvok
  • Jeri Ryan as Seven of Nine
  • Garrett Wang as Harry Kim

Guest and co-stars [ ]

  • VOY Season 7 performers
  • Rick Berman
  • Kenneth Biller

Consulting Producer: Brannon Braga

  • Michael Piller
  • Jeri Taylor
  • Merri D. Howard
  • Peter Lauritson

Producer: J.P. Farrell

  • Dawn Velazquez
  • Bryan Fuller

Associate Producer: Stephen Welke Executive Story Editor: Michael Taylor

  • Robert Doherty
  • Phyllis Strong
  • Mike Sussman

Unit Production Manager: Brad Yacobian Production Coordinator: Diane Overdiek

  • Jerry Fleck
  • Arlene Fukai

Second Assistant Director: Michael DeMeritt Second Second Assistant Director: Lorri Fischer Script Supervisor: Jan Rudolph Science Consultant: Andre Bormanis Production Designer: Richard James Art Director: Louise Dorton Set Designer: Tim Earls Senior Illustrator/Technical Consultant: Rick Sternbach Scenic Arts Supervisor/Technical Consultant: Michael Okuda

  • Geoffrey Mandel
  • James Van Over

Construction Coordinator: Al Smutko Property Master: Alan Sims Set Decorator: Jim Mees Director of Photography: Marvin Rush , ASC Chief Lighting Technician: Bill Peets First Company Grip: Randy Burgess Video Operator: Ben Betts Special Effects: Richard Ratliff Stunt Coordinator: Dennis Madalone Video Supervisor: Denise Okuda Hair Designer: Josee Normand

  • Charlotte A. Parker
  • Viviane Normand
  • Gloria Montemayor

Make-Up Designed and Supervised By: Michael Westmore

  • Tina Hoffman
  • Scott Wheeler
  • James Rohland
  • Suzanne Diaz
  • Natalie Wood

Costume Designer: Robert Blackman Wardrobe Supervisor: Carol Kunz

  • Susie Money
  • Matt Hoffman
  • Jamie Thomas

Supervising Sound Editor: Bill Wistrom Supervising Sound Effects Editor: Jim Wolvington

  • Masanobu Tomita
  • T. Ashley Harvey
  • Dale Chaloukian
  • Lazard Ward
  • Steve D'Errico

Casting Executive: Helen Mossler

  • Junie Lowry-Johnson

Original Casting By: Nan Dutton , CSA

  • Daryl Baskin
  • Bob Lederman

Assistant Editor: Noel A. Guerra

(Not a complete list)

  • Dennis McCarthy ("Unimatrix Zero, Part II", "Critical Care", "Body and Soul", "Lineage", "Workforce", "Workforce, Part II", "Natural Law", "Renaissance Man")
  • David Bell ("Imperfection", "Flesh and Blood", "Nightingale", "Prophecy", "Homestead")
  • Jay Chattaway ("Drive", "Repression", "Shattered", "The Void", "Human Error", "Author, Author", "Endgame")
  • Paul Baillargeon ("Inside Man", "Repentance", "Q2", "Friendship One")

Music Editor: Gerry Sackman Visual Effects Producer: Dan Curry

  • Ronald B. Moore
  • Mitch Suskin

Visual Effects Assistant Editor: Edward Hoffmeister Visual Effects Associate: Chad Zimmerman Sound Mixer: Alan Bernard Camera Operator: Douglas Knapp Post Production Coordinator: Monique K. Chambers Script Coordinator: Maggie Allen

  • David Rossi
  • Maril Davis
  • Joanna Fuller
  • Michael O'Halloran
  • Nicole Gravett
  • Eric Norman
  • Terry Matalas
  • Aaron Segal

Transportation Captain: Stu Satterfield

  • Larry Dukes
  • Cameron Calder
  • Bobby Guillory

Location Manager: Lisa White Publicity: Rachel Fox Assistant to Publicist: Candice Clark Production Accountant: Suzi Shimizu DGA Trainee: Mark Rabinowitz

Filmed with Panavision Cameras and Lenses

  • Santa Barbara Studios
  • 4MC Sound Services
  • Todd Studios Burbank

Digital Optical Effects: Composite Image Systems

  • Four Media Company
  • Level 3 Post
  • Foundation Imaging
  • Digital Muse

Media releases [ ]

  • VOY Season 7 UK VHS
  • VOY Season 7 DVD

External links [ ]

  • Star Trek: Voyager season 7 at Memory Beta , the wiki for licensed Star Trek works
  • Star Trek: Voyager Season Seven Credits at StarTrek.com
  • Star Trek Voyager Season 7 episode reviews  at Ex Astris Scientia
  • 2 Federation attack fighter
  • 3 Star Trek: The Next Generation

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Best Star Trek: Voyager Episode Of Each Main Character

  • Each main character on Star Trek: Voyager had standout episodes that showcased their individual strengths and storylines.
  • Episodes like "Before and After" (Kes), "Mortal Coil" (Neelix), "Latent Image" (The Doctor), and "One" (Seven of Nine) brought depth and development to these characters.
  • Captain Janeway's standout episode was "Year of Hell," which demonstrated her heroism, loyalty, vulnerability, and complexity.

Each main character on Star Trek: Voyager got a chance to shine during the show's run, and all of them have an episode that stands out as their best . Voyager was the fourth series in the Star Trek timeline and featured a cast of diverse characters, including Star Trek 's first female Captain, Kathryn Janeway (Kate Mulgrew). During Voyager 's run, Janeway led her crew on a journey through the Delta Quadrant after the USS Voyager became stranded on the other side of the galaxy in the show's pilot episode, "Caretaker, Parts I&II."

Like many Star Trek series, Voyager 's cast of characters acted as an ensemble, with no single character standing out as the "lead." Although Janeway was technically the show's main character, every member of the core cast had episodes that focused on them, delving more into each character's backstory and enriching them so that episodes where everyone worked together were made that much more enjoyable . All of Voyager 's main characters had multiple episodes centered on them, but certain episodes undeniably stand out as each character's best of the series.

Every Voyager Character Who Has Returned In Star Trek (& How)

Kes (jennifer lien), "before and after" - voyager season 3, episode 21.

"Before and After" was a tour de force for Kes, who up until that point had been underutilized . The episode focused on Kes traveling back in time from the moment of her death, showcasing an alternate future as she attempted to determine what was happening to her. Although some of the storytelling choices were surprising, such as Kes's future self being married to Tom Paris (Robert Duncan McNeill), the character got to shine in a way that most other episodes didn't allow her to. "Before and After" also foreshadowed an important Voyager season 4 storyline, the "Year of Hell."

Honorable Mention: "Warlord" (Voyager season 3, episode 10)

Neelix (Ethan Phillips)

"mortal coil - voyager season 4, episode 12.

Neelix-focused episodes of Voyager were often hit or miss, but "Mortal Coil" stands above the rest as the character's best story. The episode explored questions of spirituality, existential issues, and psychological trauma when Neelix was brought back to life after being killed in a shuttle accident. "Mortal Coil" is a beautiful exploration of Neelix's past, culture, and trauma , and grapples with very real questions of life and death. The episode was also the first time Neelix was shown in the role of Naomi Wildman's (Brooke Stephens) godfather, kicking off one of the show's sweetest and most genuine father-daughter relationships.

Honorable Mention: "Homestead" (Voyager season 7, episode 23)

The Doctor (Robert Picardo)

"latent image" - voyager season 5, episode 11.

The Doctor was lucky enough to have several stellar episodes throughout Voyager 's run, but "Latent Image" was the character at his finest. The episode dealt with questions about the Doctor's humanity, which came into conflict with his original programming when he saved the life of Harry Kim (Garrett Wang) while allowing another Ensign who he did not know well to die. The Doctor's right to autonomy was also explored as the crew grappled with whether to erase his memories to keep his program from degrading.

The Doctor was always at his best when the question of his sentience was explored , and "Latent Image" was a wonderful example of this. The episode allowed Robert Picardo to stretch his acting talents and provided a gripping storyline that hooked audiences from the start with a mysterious twist. "Latent Image" also marked a real step forward in the Doctor’s journey to becoming more human and a shift in how the crew treated him, as an equal rather than a tool.

Honorable Mention: "Tinker Tenor Doctor Spy" (Voyager season 6, episode 4)

Seven of Nine (Jeri Ryan)

"one" - voyager season 5, episode 25.

Seven of Nine was another character with many exceptional episodes during Voyager 's run, but "One" combined the best aspects of several of them to make a winner. Watching the character grapple with being alone as she was forced to pilot the USS Voyager across a dangerous nebula by herself while the crew is in stasis truly drove home Seven's Borg nature coming into conflict with her reemerging humanity . "One" was hilarious and terrifying by turns, and explored an emotional side of Seven that not many other episodes did, showcasing the duality of her strength and vulnerability perfectly.

Honorable Mention: "Someone to Watch Over Me" (Voyager season 5, episode 22)

Jeri Ryan, Voyagers Seven Of Nine & Star Trek Future Explained

Ensign harry kim (garrett wang), "timeless" - voyager season 5, episode 6.

"Timeless" showed a completely different side of Harry Kim after a miscalculation during an attempt to return home caused Voyager to crash into an ice planet, killing the whole crew except for Harry and Commander Chakotay (Robert Beltran). The bitter, jaded, future version of Harry Kim in "Timeless" was such a departure from the character's usual personality and allowed Garrett Wang to show a different side of his acting talents, which was a big part of what made the episode so compelling . "Timeless" was also a classic Star Trek time-travel episode with a truly engaging storyline from start to finish.

Honorable Mention: "Emanations" (Voyager season 1, episode 9)

Lt. B'Elanna Torres (Roxann Dawson)

"barge of the dead" - voyager season 6, episode 3.

Voyager episodes didn't often feature B'Elanna Torres, but the ones that did were always guaranteed to be great stories. "Barge of the Dead" was no exception, tapping back into what made B'Elanna such an interesting character: her half-Klingon heritage. The episode grappled with questions of life, death, and spirituality while thoroughly exploring B'Elanna's relationship with her Klingon mother, something that had only been hinted at before. The mother-daughter relationships in B'Elanna's life, including her relationship with Captain Janeway (Kate Mulgrew) acted as the episode's emotional core , and the expansion of Klingon lore was a welcome addition.

Honorable Mention: "Faces" (Voyager season 1, episode 14)

Lt. Tom Paris (Robert Duncan McNeill)

"thirty days" - voyager season 5, episode 9.

Tom Paris is arguably the character with the most dramatic arc during Voyager 's run, and "Thirty Days" demonstrated just how far he had come. "Thirty Days" was a fascinating character study of Tom's psyche and motivations as he dictated a letter to his father while stuck in the brig after violating the Prime Directive. The episode showcased how forceful Tom's convictions could be for things he cared about, a far cry from the apathetic, jade man he had been in Voyager 's pilot . "Thirty Days" was also a wonderful exploration of Tom's most important relationships, including Captain Janeway and B'Elanna Torres.

Honorable Mention: "Bride of Chaotica!" (Voyager season 5, episode 12)

Lt. Tuvok (Tim Russ)

"riddles" - voyager season 6, episode 6.

Some of Star Trek 's most interesting episodes involve a Vulcan losing control of his logic. "Riddles" was one of these episodes for Tuvok, showing the character's emotional side after an alien attack caused Tuvok to suffer brain damage. Seeing a vulnerable, childlike Tuvok was hilarious and heartwarming by turns, but the deeper emotional power of "Riddles" came through the bittersweet exploration of Tuvok's complicated relationship with Neelix . Tuvok and Neelix had always been portrayed as hilariously antagonistic, but watching Neelix's dedication to helping Tuvok navigate his new personality and the true friendship that blossomed between the two packed a punch.

Honorable Mention: "Innocence" (Voyager season 2, episode 22)

All 5 Star Trek Characters Played By Tuvok Actor Tim Russ

Commander chakotay (robert beltran), "shattered" - voyager season 7, episode 11.

Most Chakotay-centric episodes were in Voyager 's early seasons, but "Shattered" was a rare late-season treat that followed the character navigating through different time periods after Voyager became temporally split. Besides being a wonderful retrospective of Voyager in its final season, having Chakotay be the episode's point-of-view character was perfect . As the ship's First Officer and former Captain of Voyager 's Maquis crew, Chakotay was the ideal person to rally everyone to bring the ship back into temporal sync. Additionally, "Shattered" offered a great take on Chakotay and Captain Janeway, and brought back characters like Seska (Martha Hackett) for one more outing.

Honorable Mention: "Tattoo" (Voyager season 2, episode 9)

Captain Kathryn Janeway (Kate Mulgrew)

"year of hell, parts i&ii" - voyager season 4, episodes 8&9.

As Voyager 's Captain, Kathryn Janeway was at the center of almost every episode, but "Year of Hell, Parts I&II" was Janeway at her absolute best. The episodes demonstrated Janeway's greatest strengths and greatest flaws as she and Voyager's crew weathered a brutal year-long attack by the Krenim Imperium. "Year of Hell" pushed Janeway to her limit, portraying her as a true hero and demonstrating her unwavering loyalty to her crew while also beautifully capturing her vulnerability and complexity . "Year of Hell" is one of Star Trek: Voyager 's best episodes , and this is largely thanks to Captain Janeway's performance.

Honorable Mention: "Counterpoint" (Voyager season 5, episode 10)

Star Trek: Voyager is available to stream on Paramount+.

Star Trek: Voyager

Release Date 1995-05-23

Cast Jennifer Lien, Garrett Wang, Tim Russ, Robert Duncan McNeill, Roxann Dawson, Robert Beltran, Kate Mulgrew, Jeri Ryan, Ethan Phillips, Robert Picardo

Genres Sci-Fi, Adventure

Rating TV-PG

Writers Michael Piller, Rick Berman

Network UPN

Streaming Service(s) Paramount+

Franchise(s) Star Trek

Showrunner Kenneth Biller, Jeri Taylor, Michael Piller, Brannon Braga

Best Star Trek: Voyager Episode Of Each Main Character

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Star Trek: Voyager – Season 1, Episode 7

Ex post facto, where to watch, star trek: voyager — season 1, episode 7.

Watch Star Trek: Voyager — Season 1, Episode 7 with a subscription on Paramount+, or buy it on Vudu, Prime Video, Apple TV.

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Cast & crew.

Kate Mulgrew

Capt. Kathryn Janeway

Robert Beltran

Roxann Dawson

B'Elanna Torres

Robert Duncan McNeill

Jennifer Lien

Ethan Phillips

Episode Info

Star Trek: Discovery Season 5's Start Feels Bittersweet, And Really Drives Home How Much This Show Reminds Me Of Voyager

I don't want the ride to end.

Star Trek: Discovery Season 5 feels like the show's best season yet, and that's incredibly bittersweet. I was only given the first four episodes to screen of the upcoming Star Trek show , but it's clear that the final adventure of the Sonequa Martin-Green-led series is primed to be the best of the run. While watching, I couldn't help but feel it's bittersweet and be reminded of the same feelings I had when watching Voyager Season 5. 

I think in the years to come, a lot of comparisons will be made to both shows, especially since they're both available to stream with a Paramount+ subscription . Beyond the fact that they're both shows with women as captains of vessels, Star Trek: Discovery Season 5 nails the comparison, similar to how I felt when watching the Season 5 episodes of Voyager . As a note, this is a spoiler-free analysis of the final season, so don't worry about having any bits tarnished before the big premiere on April 4th. 

Both Discovery And Voyager Hit Their Stride Late In The Run

If I've had any criticism regarding Star Trek: Discovery since its beginning, it was that it often suffered from uneven storytelling. Seasons 1 through 3 delivered on building anticipation and delivering some great episodes, but it always felt like the ending never quite lived up to the expectation of what was being built towards. Many times I was left feeling that the show reached a climax weeks ahead of the season finale, and the rest was good, but not quite as thrilling. 

Star Trek: Discovery Season 4, in my opinion, was the first time one of this show's seasons appropriately built toward a satisfying ending that peaked at just the right time. Now imagine that same vibe in Season 5, except it's balls-to-the-wall right out the gate. As promised, the series is delivering on action in Season 5 , but as Doug Jones told CinemaBlend, it's not sacrificing the parts people love about Discovery in the process. This is the perfect blend of action and emotion, and there's even some episodic fun likely inspired by Strange New Worlds ' success . 

It feels like Discovery finally nailed its formula in Season 5, which is exactly how I felt about Star Trek: Voyager . The show gets a big boost with Jeri Ryan joining as Seven of Nine in Season 4, and then by Season 5, we have strong stories with her, The Doctor, Janeway, and everyone else. There's an argument often made that Season 5 of Voyager is the peak of Star Trek storytelling, even if other shows like The Next Generation were more consistently solid. 

That feeling is the same here with Discovery , in that when this show is good, it's phenomenal. Discovery didn't re-invent itself to find this formula either, it just found what will ultimately be the ideal framework for serialized storytelling in the franchise going forward. There's no denying some fans felt it stumbled along the way, but I'm confident they'll be fully on board with this incredible, thrilling adventure that puts them in search of a powerful artifact. 

The Strength Of Star Trek: Discovery Season 5 Will Have You Wishing We Had More Adventures

The massive downside of Star Trek: Discovery 's incredibly strong start to Season 5 is that for every thrill you have, it'll be in the back of your head that this show is ending. I can't tell you the number of times in the first four episodes that I said to myself, "Damn, if they just had another season or two." I very much have the feeling that the show is going to end its run on top and leave audiences begging for a follow-up and when to expect it.

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The Doctor murdering people will haunt my dreams.

At the same time, I do have to wonder if Discovery would've kept this strong momentum or struggled in the same way in successive seasons as Voyager did. Voyager Seasons 6 and 7 certainly weren't bad if you overlook the weird Chakotay and Seven romance, but there's no denying Season 5 was the peak. I can't say  Discovery  would've followed the same pattern as  Voyager , but I can say that if it did, I would've gladly watched the next two seasons and sooner had the show ended like that than get this abrupt ending. 

The good news is that while Star Trek: Discovery will end as a series, the story is never truly over for these characters. Assuming the final scene shot that gave Doug Jones closure isn't the entire crew dying in a violent explosion, there will be opportunities in the future for this crew to appear in other projects and adventures. We also already have the first spinoff movie in development, with Star Trek: Section 31 's production kicking off , so it's not like the franchise is shying away from developing new projects based on it. 

And just to reiterate, these are just my thoughts and feelings on the first four episodes of Star Trek: Discovery Season 5. Paramount+ did not provide the remaining six episodes of the season so far, though based on what is set up in these episodes, I'm optimistic the quality will continue throughout the rest of the season. There are some big surprises in store for viewers that make themselves known from the first episode, and it's the kind of surprise that, again, makes you wish there were just more episodes for more moments like this to happen. 

Star Trek: Voyager has yet to get a movie, though I'd argue now is the perfect time for one. Star Trek: The Original Series , however, ended up getting six movies years after its cancellation. I can't say for sure what's possible in the modern streaming market, but I would wager that if the fans want it and the cast is available and willing, there are going to be opportunities in the future to bring back the Discovery crew for movies set in the 32nd century. For now, we have ten more episodes to enjoy, and I think fans definitely will like them. 

Star Trek fans can stream the first two episodes of Discovery Season 5 when they premiere on Paramount+ Thursday, April 4th. Keep with CinemaBlend in the coming weeks as we talk more about the upcoming season and share all we learned from the cast in our interviews about the past, present and future of Discovery !

Mick Joest

Mick Joest is a Content Producer for CinemaBlend with his hand in an eclectic mix of television goodness. Star Trek is his main jam, but he also regularly reports on happenings in the world of Star Trek, WWE, Doctor Who, 90 Day Fiancé, Quantum Leap, and Big Brother. He graduated from the University of Southern Indiana with a degree in Journalism and a minor in Radio and Television. He's great at hosting panels and appearing on podcasts if given the chance as well.

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Voyager 1, First Craft in Interstellar Space, May Have Gone Dark

The 46-year-old probe, which flew by Jupiter and Saturn in its youth and inspired earthlings with images of the planet as a “Pale Blue Dot,” hasn’t sent usable data from interstellar space in months.

star trek voyager season 7 episode 1

By Orlando Mayorquin

When Voyager 1 launched in 1977, scientists hoped it could do what it was built to do and take up-close images of Jupiter and Saturn. It did that — and much more.

Voyager 1 discovered active volcanoes, moons and planetary rings, proving along the way that Earth and all of humanity could be squished into a single pixel in a photograph, a “ pale blue dot, ” as the astronomer Carl Sagan called it. It stretched a four-year mission into the present day, embarking on the deepest journey ever into space.

Now, it may have bid its final farewell to that faraway dot.

Voyager 1 , the farthest man-made object in space, hasn’t sent coherent data to Earth since November. NASA has been trying to diagnose what the Voyager mission’s project manager, Suzanne Dodd, called the “most serious issue” the robotic probe has faced since she took the job in 2010.

The spacecraft encountered a glitch in one of its computers that has eliminated its ability to send engineering and science data back to Earth.

The loss of Voyager 1 would cap decades of scientific breakthroughs and signal the beginning of the end for a mission that has given shape to humanity’s most distant ambition and inspired generations to look to the skies.

“Scientifically, it’s a big loss,” Ms. Dodd said. “I think — emotionally — it’s maybe even a bigger loss.”

Voyager 1 is one half of the Voyager mission. It has a twin spacecraft, Voyager 2.

Launched in 1977, they were primarily built for a four-year trip to Jupiter and Saturn , expanding on earlier flybys by the Pioneer 10 and 11 probes.

The Voyager mission capitalized on a rare alignment of the outer planets — once every 175 years — allowing the probes to visit all four.

Using the gravity of each planet, the Voyager spacecraft could swing onto the next, according to NASA .

The mission to Jupiter and Saturn was a success.

The 1980s flybys yielded several new discoveries, including new insights about the so-called great red spot on Jupiter, the rings around Saturn and the many moons of each planet.

Voyager 2 also explored Uranus and Neptune , becoming in 1989 the only spacecraft to explore all four outer planets.

star trek voyager season 7 episode 1

Voyager 1, meanwhile, had set a course for deep space, using its camera to photograph the planets it was leaving behind along the way. Voyager 2 would later begin its own trek into deep space.

“Anybody who is interested in space is interested in the things Voyager discovered about the outer planets and their moons,” said Kate Howells, the public education specialist at the Planetary Society, an organization co-founded by Dr. Sagan to promote space exploration.

“But I think the pale blue dot was one of those things that was sort of more poetic and touching,” she added.

On Valentine’s Day 1990, Voyager 1, darting 3.7 billion miles away from the sun toward the outer reaches of the solar system, turned around and snapped a photo of Earth that Dr. Sagan and others understood to be a humbling self-portrait of humanity.

“It’s known the world over, and it does connect humanity to the stars,” Ms. Dodd said of the mission.

She added: “I’ve had many, many many people come up to me and say: ‘Wow, I love Voyager. It’s what got me excited about space. It’s what got me thinking about our place here on Earth and what that means.’”

Ms. Howells, 35, counts herself among those people.

About 10 years ago, to celebrate the beginning of her space career, Ms. Howells spent her first paycheck from the Planetary Society to get a Voyager tattoo.

Though spacecraft “all kind of look the same,” she said, more people recognize the tattoo than she anticipated.

“I think that speaks to how famous Voyager is,” she said.

The Voyagers made their mark on popular culture , inspiring a highly intelligent “Voyager 6” in “Star Trek: The Motion Picture” and references on “The X Files” and “The West Wing.”

Even as more advanced probes were launched from Earth, Voyager 1 continued to reliably enrich our understanding of space.

In 2012, it became the first man-made object to exit the heliosphere, the space around the solar system directly influenced by the sun. There is a technical debate among scientists around whether Voyager 1 has actually left the solar system, but, nonetheless, it became interstellar — traversing the space between stars.

That charted a new path for heliophysics, which looks at how the sun influences the space around it. In 2018, Voyager 2 followed its twin between the stars.

Before Voyager 1, scientific data on the sun’s gases and material came only from within the heliosphere’s confines, according to Dr. Jamie Rankin, Voyager’s deputy project scientist.

“And so now we can for the first time kind of connect the inside-out view from the outside-in,” Dr. Rankin said, “That’s a big part of it,” she added. “But the other half is simply that a lot of this material can’t be measured any other way than sending a spacecraft out there.”

Voyager 1 and 2 are the only such spacecraft. Before it went offline, Voyager 1 had been studying an anomalous disturbance in the magnetic field and plasma particles in interstellar space.

“Nothing else is getting launched to go out there,” Ms. Dodd said. “So that’s why we’re spending the time and being careful about trying to recover this spacecraft — because the science is so valuable.”

But recovery means getting under the hood of an aging spacecraft more than 15 billion miles away, equipped with the technology of yesteryear. It takes 45 hours to exchange information with the craft.

It has been repeated over the years that a smartphone has hundreds of thousands of times Voyager 1’s memory — and that the radio transmitter emits as many watts as a refrigerator lightbulb.

“There was one analogy given that is it’s like trying to figure out where your cursor is on your laptop screen when your laptop screen doesn’t work,” Ms. Dodd said.

Her team is still holding out hope, she said, especially as the tantalizing 50th launch anniversary in 2027 approaches. Voyager 1 has survived glitches before, though none as serious.

Voyager 2 is still operational, but aging. It has faced its own technical difficulties too.

NASA had already estimated that the nuclear-powered generators of both spacecrafts would likely die around 2025.

Even if the Voyager interstellar mission is near its end, the voyage still has far to go.

Voyager 1 and its twin, each 40,000 years away from the next closest star, will arguably remain on an indefinite mission.

“If Voyager should sometime in its distant future encounter beings from some other civilization in space, it bears a message,” Dr. Sagan said in a 1980 interview .

Each spacecraft carries a gold-plated phonograph record loaded with an array of sound recordings and images representing humanity’s richness, its diverse cultures and life on Earth.

“A gift across the cosmic ocean from one island of civilization to another,” Dr. Sagan said.

Orlando Mayorquin is a general assignment and breaking news reporter based in New York. More about Orlando Mayorquin

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Never miss an eclipse, a meteor shower, a rocket launch or any other 2024 event  that’s out of this world with  our space and astronomy calendar .

A nova named T Coronae Borealis lit up the night about 80 years ago. Astronomers say it’s expected to put on another show  in the coming months.

Voyager 1, the 46-year-old first craft in interstellar space which flew by Jupiter and Saturn in its youth, may have gone dark .

Two spacecraft have ended up askew on the moon this year, illustrating that it’s not so easy to land upright on the lunar surface. Here is why .

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Star Trek: Voyager

Robert Beltran, Jennifer Lien, Robert Duncan McNeill, Kate Mulgrew, Robert Picardo, Jeri Ryan, Roxann Dawson, Ethan Phillips, Tim Russ, and Garrett Wang in Star Trek: Voyager (1995)

Pulled to the far side of the galaxy, where the Federation is seventy-five years away at maximum warp speed, a Starfleet ship must cooperate with Maquis rebels to find a way home. Pulled to the far side of the galaxy, where the Federation is seventy-five years away at maximum warp speed, a Starfleet ship must cooperate with Maquis rebels to find a way home. Pulled to the far side of the galaxy, where the Federation is seventy-five years away at maximum warp speed, a Starfleet ship must cooperate with Maquis rebels to find a way home.

  • Rick Berman
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  • Jeri Taylor
  • Kate Mulgrew
  • Robert Beltran
  • Roxann Dawson
  • 427 User reviews
  • 26 Critic reviews
  • 33 wins & 84 nominations total

Episodes 168

"Star Trek: Discovery" Season 3 Explained

Photos 2084

Robert Duncan McNeill, Kate Mulgrew, Roxann Dawson, and Tim Russ in Star Trek: Voyager (1995)

  • Capt. Kathryn Janeway …

Robert Beltran

  • Cmdr. Chakotay …

Roxann Dawson

  • Lt. B'Elanna Torres …

Robert Duncan McNeill

  • Lt. Tom Paris …

Ethan Phillips

  • The Doctor …

Tim Russ

  • Lt. Tuvok …

Garrett Wang

  • Ensign Harry Kim …

Tarik Ergin

  • Lt. Ayala …

Majel Barrett

  • Voyager Computer …

Jeri Ryan

  • Seven of Nine …

Jennifer Lien

  • William McKenzie …

Scarlett Pomers

  • Naomi Wildman

Martha Hackett

  • Ensign Brooks

Manu Intiraymi

  • Science Division Officer …
  • Jeri Taylor (showrunner)
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  • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

Stellar Photos From the "Star Trek" TV Universe

Nichelle Nichols and Sonequa Martin-Green at an event for Star Trek: Discovery (2017)

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Star Trek: Deep Space Nine

Did you know

  • Trivia When auditioning for the part of the holographic doctor, Robert Picardo was asked to say the line "Somebody forgot to turn off my program." He did so, then ad-libbed "I'm a doctor, not a light bulb" and got the part.
  • Goofs There is speculation that the way the Ocampa are shown to have offspring is an impossible situation, as a species where the female can only have offspring at one event in her life would half in population every generation, even if every single member had offspring. While Ocampa females can only become pregnant once in their lifetime, if was never stated how many children could be born at one time. Kes mentions having an uncle, implying that multiple births from one pregnancy are possible.

Seven of Nine : Fun will now commence.

  • Alternate versions Several episodes, such as the show's debut and finale, were originally aired as 2-hour TV-movies. For syndication, these episodes were reedited into two-part episodes to fit one-hour timeslots.
  • Connections Edited into Star Trek: Deep Space Nine: Inter Arma Enim Silent Leges (1999)

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March 18, 2024

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As Voyager 1's mission draws to a close, one planetary scientist reflects on its legacy

by Daniel Strain, University of Colorado at Boulder

Voyager 1

For nearly 50 years, NASA's Voyager 1 mission has competed for the title of deep space's little engine that could. Launched in 1977 along with its twin, Voyager 2, the spacecraft is now soaring more than 15 billion miles from Earth.

On their journeys through the solar system , the Voyager spacecraft beamed startling images back to Earth—of Jupiter and Saturn, then Uranus and Neptune and their moons. Voyager 1's most famous shot may be what famed astronomer Carl Sagan called the "pale blue dot," a lonely image of Earth taken from 6 billion miles away in 1990.

But Voyager 1's trek could now be drawing to a close. Since December, the spacecraft--which weighs less than most cars--has been sending nonsensical messages back to Earth, and engineers are struggling to fix the problem. Voyager 2 remains operational.

Fran Bagenal is a planetary scientist at the Laboratory for Atmospheric and Space Physics (LASP) at CU Boulder. She started working on the Voyager mission during a summer student job in the late 1970s and has followed the two spacecraft closely since.

To celebrate Voyager 1, Bagenal reflects on the mission's legacy—and which planet she wants to visit again.

Many are impressed that the spacecraft has kept going for this long. Do you agree?

Voyager 1's computer was put together in the 1970s, and there are very few people around who still use those computing languages. The communication rate is 40 bits per second. Not megabits. Not kilobits. Forty bits per second. Moreover, the round-trip communication time is 45 hours. It's amazing that they're still communicating with it at all.

What was it like working on Voyager during the mission's early days?

At the very beginning, we used computer punch cards. The data was on magnetic tapes, and we would print out line-plots on reels of paper. It was very primitive.

But planet by planet, with each flyby, the technology got a lot more sophisticated. By the time we got to Neptune in 1989, we were doing our science on much more efficient computers, and NASA presented its results live across the globe over an early version of the internet.

Think about it—going from punch cards to the internet in 12 years.

How did the Voyager spacecraft shape our understanding of the solar system?

First of all, the pictures were jaw-dropping. They were the first high-quality, close-up pictures of the four gas giant planets and their moons. The Voyagers really revolutionized our thinking by going from one planet to the other and comparing them.

Jupiter and Saturn's ammonia white and orange clouds, for example, were violently swept around by strong winds, while Uranus and Neptune's milder weather systems were hidden and colored blue by atmospheric methane. But the most dramatic discoveries were the multiple distinct worlds of the different moons, from Jupiter's cratered Callisto and volcanic Io to Saturn's cloudy Titan to plumes erupting on Triton, a moon of Neptune.

The Jupiter and Saturn systems have since been explored in greater detail by orbiting missions—Galileo and Juno at Jupiter, Cassini at Saturn.

As Voyager 1's mission draws to a close, one planetary scientist reflects on its legacy

Voyager 2 is the only spacecraft that has visited Uranus and Neptune. Do we need to return?

My vote is to return to Uranus—the only planet in our solar system that's tipped on its side.

We didn't know before Voyager whether Uranus had a magnetic field. When we arrived, we found that Uranus has a magnetic field that's severely tilted with respect to the planet's rotation. That's a weird magnetic field.

Jupiter, Saturn and Neptune all emit a lot of heat from the inside. They glow in the infrared, emitting two and a half times more energy than they receive from the sun. These things are hot.

Uranus isn't the same. It doesn't have this internal heat source. So maybe, just maybe, at the end of the formation of the solar system billions of years ago, some big object hit Uranus, tipped it on its side, stirred it up and dissipated the heat. Perhaps, this led to an irregular magnetic field .

These are the sorts of questions that were raised by Voyager 30 years ago. Now we need to go back.

Culturally, Voyager 1's most lasting impact may be the 'pale blue dot.' Why?

I have huge respect for Carl Sagan. I met him when I was 16, a high school student in England, and I shook his hand.

He pointed to the Voyager image and said, "Here we are. We're leaving the solar system. We're looking back, and there's this pale blue dot. That's us. It's all our friends. It's all our relatives. It's where we live and die."

This was the time we were just beginning to say, "Wait a minute. What are we doing to our planet Earth?" He was awakening or reinforcing this need to think about what humans are doing to Earth. It also evoked why we need to go exploring space: to think about where we are and how we fit into the solar system.

How are you feeling now that Voyager 1's mission may be coming to an end?

It's amazing. No one thought they would go this far. But with just a few instruments working, how much longer can we keep going? I think it will soon be time to say, "Right, jolly good. Extraordinary job. Well done."

Provided by University of Colorado at Boulder

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  1. Ranek Thanks The Doctor For Saving His Life

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  1. Star Trek: Voyager: Season 7, Episode 1

    TV-PG. Genre. Sci-Fi, Fantasy, Adventure. Original Language. English. Release Date. Oct 4, 2000. See Details. The Borg queen (Susanna Thompson) launches a full-scale attack against Voyager; Seven ...

  2. List of Star Trek: Voyager episodes

    This is an episode list for the science-fiction television series Star Trek: Voyager, which aired on UPN from January 1995 through May 2001. This is the fifth television program in the Star Trek franchise, and comprises a total of 168 (DVD and original broadcast) or 172 (syndicated) episodes over the show's seven seasons. Four episodes of Voyager ("Caretaker", "Dark Frontier", "Flesh and Blood ...

  3. Star Trek: Voyager

    7. Body and Soul - On an away mission, Harry Kim, Seven and the Doctor are captured (imagine that), and the Doctor takes refuge "inside" Seven's circuitry, thereby triggering the Brain Uploading trope. And for much of the episode, Jeri Ryan just kills it as EMH-inhabiting-Seven - very funny stuff. ****. 8.

  4. "Star Trek: Voyager" Ex Post Facto (TV Episode 1995)

    Ex Post Facto: Directed by LeVar Burton. With Kate Mulgrew, Robert Beltran, Roxann Dawson, Jennifer Lien. Tuvok plays detective when Paris is wrongfully convicted by an alien race of murder.

  5. Unimatrix Zero

    Unimatrix Zero. " Unimatrix Zero " is a two-part episode of Star Trek: Voyager, the cliffhanger between 26th episode of the sixth season and the first episode of the seventh season. Starfleet 's USS Voyager, stranded on the other side of the Galaxy, once again encounters a race of cybernetic organisms called the Borg as the ship journeys back ...

  6. Star Trek: Voyager (TV Series 1995-2001)

    S1.E3 ∙ Time and Again. Mon, Jan 30, 1995. The Voyager crew discovers a planet which recently suffered a horrific catastrophe. Upon investigation, Janeway and Paris are sent back in time before the disaster and are faced with the decision of whether to try to stop it. 7.1/10 (2.3K)

  7. Star Trek: Voyager (TV Series 1995-2001)

    Wed, Nov 29, 2000. Free from their pursuers, the leader of the holograms decides to continue the crusade against the organics in order to liberate all holograms, everywhere. The Doctor finally realises what he had done and comes up with a plan to redeem himself. 7.6/10 (1.8K)

  8. Star Trek: Voyager: Season 7

    Buy Star Trek: Voyager — Season 7 on Vudu, Prime Video, Apple TV. Voyager 's final season dishes some tense quandaries for Captain Kathryn Janeway to mull over, but it also rides off into the ...

  9. Watch Star Trek: Voyager Season 7 Episode 1: Unimatrix Zero, Part 2

    S7 E13 Jan 31, 2001. Repentance. Show More. Seven's long-lost love lures Janeway into a deadly encounter with the Borg Queen.

  10. Star Trek: Voyager Season 7

    2954. Carnival Eats (Season 11) +495. Show all seasons in the JustWatch Streaming Charts. Streaming charts last updated: 9:26:41 PM, 02/26/2024. Star Trek: Voyager is 2950 on the JustWatch Daily Streaming Charts today. The TV show has moved up the charts by 465 places since yesterday. In the United States, it is currently more popular than UFO ...

  11. Star Trek: Voyager Season 7 Episodes

    Endgame Parts 1 and 2. S7 E25. May 23, 2001. Voyager's quest to return home is aided by a visitor from the future - Admiral Kathryn Janeway. However, Janeway decides to risk Voyager's shortcut home in order to destroy the Borg and save millions of lives. Every available episode for Season 7 of Star Trek: Voyager on Paramount+.

  12. Every Star Trek: Voyager 2-Part Episode Ranked, Worst To Best

    Star Trek: Voyager closes its second season with another chapter of the story arc featuring Seska (Martha Hackett), a Cardassian spy who had been posing as a Bajoran among the Maquis crew.Allied with the Kazon-Nistrim, Seska takes over the USS Voyager and leaves the crew stranded on an inhospitable planet.Watching the Voyager crew come together to survive is what the first few seasons are all ...

  13. Watch Star Trek: Voyager Season 7

    Buy Season 7. SD $29.99. Redeem a gift card or promotion code. S7 E1 - Unimatrix Zero (Part 2) October 3, 2000. 44min. TV-PG. Seven's long-lost love lures Janeway into a deadly encounter with the Borg Queen. Subscribe to Paramount+ for $1.99/month for 2 month (s) and $11.99/month thereafter, or buy.

  14. Watch Star Trek: Voyager Season 7

    Star Trek: Voyager. Season 7. (1,534) 7.8 2001 X-Ray TV-PG. In Season 7, Janeway leads the crew through a fierce fight against the Borg drones; delves into political infighting; wrestles her way out of a void; and, finally, makes her way back home.

  15. Best Star Trek: Voyager Episode From Each Of The Show's 7 Seasons

    Star Trek: Voyager season 7 is rife with solid episodes, but it's the finale that takes the honor of being the season's best. "Endgame" opens on the USS Voyager's return to Earth after decades of harrowing adventures, in which the crew faces devastating losses. With a new plan, Admiral Janeway ensures those losses never happen, comes home early ...

  16. VOY Season 7

    VOY Season 7 UK VHS; VOY Season 7 DVD; External links [] Star Trek: Voyager season 7 at Memory Beta, the wiki for licensed Star Trek works; Star Trek: Voyager Season Seven Credits at StarTrek.com; Star Trek Voyager Season 7 episode reviews at Ex Astris Scientia

  17. Star Trek: Voyager

    When the Delta Flyer comes to the aid of a medical transport, Harry Kim gets his first command. Free from their pursuers, the leader of the holograms decides to continue the crusade against the organics in order to liberate all holograms, everywhere. The Doctor finally realises what he had done and comes up with a plan to redeem himself.

  18. Prime Video: Star Trek: Voyager Season 7

    May 22, 2001. 1 h 26 min. 13+. Voyager's quest to return home is aided by a visitor from the future - Admiral Kathryn Janeway. Store Filled. Free trial of Paramount+ or buy. Buy SD $1.99. In Season 7, Janeway leads the crew through a fierce fight against the Borg drones; delves into political infighting; wrestles her way out of a void; and ...

  19. Watch Star Trek: Voyager · Season 7 Full Episodes Online

    Where to watch Star Trek: Voyager · Season 7 starring Kate Mulgrew, Jeri Ryan, Robert Picardo.

  20. Best Star Trek: Voyager Episode Of Each Main Character

    Star Trek: Voyager had many great ensemble episodes, but every main character on the show also got their chance to shine in the spotlight. ... (Voyager season 1, episode 14) Lt. Tom Paris (Robert ...

  21. Watch Star Trek: Voyager Season 1 Episode 7: Eye Of The Needle

    S1 E745MTV-PG. The crew is overjoyed to find a wormhole leading to the Alpha Quadrant, only to find that it is micro-sized and terminates in the Romulan Empire. The lone Romulan they contact, however, eventually seems won over to helping them. Watch Full Episodes. Full Episodes. Season 1.

  22. Star Trek: Voyager: Season 1, Episode 7

    Buy Star Trek: Voyager — Season 1, Episode 7 on Vudu, Amazon Prime Video, Apple TV. Return to page navigation. Discover Popular TV on Streaming View All Popular TV on Streaming. Previous 60% ...

  23. Star Trek: Discovery Season 5's Start Feels Bittersweet, And Really

    Beyond the fact that they're both shows with women as captains of vessels, Star Trek: Discovery Season 5 nails the comparison, similar to how I felt when watching the Season 5 episodes of Voyager ...

  24. "Star Trek: Voyager" Flesh and Blood (TV Episode 2000)

    Flesh and Blood: Directed by David Livingston, Michael Vejar. With Kate Mulgrew, Robert Beltran, Roxann Dawson, Robert Duncan McNeill. Free from their pursuers, the leader of the holograms decides to continue the crusade against the organics in order to liberate all holograms, everywhere. The Doctor finally realises what he had done and comes up with a plan to redeem himself.

  25. Voyager 1, First Craft in Interstellar Space, May Have Gone Dark

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    Star Trek: Voyager: Created by Rick Berman, Michael Piller, Jeri Taylor. With Kate Mulgrew, Robert Beltran, Roxann Dawson, Robert Duncan McNeill. Pulled to the far side of the galaxy, where the Federation is seventy-five years away at maximum warp speed, a Starfleet ship must cooperate with Maquis rebels to find a way home.

  27. As Voyager 1's mission draws to a close, one planetary scientist

    For nearly 50 years, NASA's Voyager 1 mission has competed for the title of deep space's little engine that could. Launched in 1977 along with its twin, Voyager 2, the spacecraft is now soaring ...